The 2020 United States House of Representatives elections, coinciding with the 2020 United States presidential election as well as the Senate races, were elections for all 435 U.S. congressional districts and 6 non-voting delegations held on November 3, 2020. During the Spring of 2020, Democrats held 232 seats, Republicans 197, Independent 1, and 5 vacancies.
60 days prior to the election, Democrat rioting in Democrat cities which Democrat candidates refused to condemn and openly endorsed, began affecting polls of House races, tilting against Democrat authoritarianism and violence.[2]
Black Lives Matter, a Marxist organization, together with the violent Antifa terror group and other like-minded organizations, attempted a violent overthrow of the existing culture and political structure. Many Democrat candidates, and no Republicans, advocate for defunding the police and emptying the prisons at a time that murder has increased more than 20% in the twenty largest, Democrat-controlled cities. The Black Lives Matter organization also advocates destruction of the "Eurocentric" nuclear family. Black Lives Mater protesters who are mostly white Socialists, murdered at least 4 Blacks, 2 of them children, and shot at least 3 others in the violence.
House Democrats unanimously blocked a GOP-led bill in late June 2020 to condemn rioting and looting.[3]
After the impeachment coup against President Trump, it was reported in March 10, 2020 by Gallup that congressional Republican approval ratings had exceeded that of their Democrat colleagues.[4] Largely owed to failed partisan Democrat efforts in their mobocratic attempt to remove Trump, this has been noted numerous times as a significant turning point for the 2020 elections.[5]
Bradley Byrne, the conservative Republican from Alabama's 1st district, retired from the House to unsuccessfully run for U.S. Senate. His seat was considered a safe hold.[6]
No candidate won a majority in the Republican primary, with Jerry Carl having a plurality at 38.7% of the vote.[7]
No Democrat candidate won a majority in the primary, with Kiani Gardner having a plurality at 44.1% of the vote.[7]
Jerry Carl won the general election with 65% of the votes cast.[8]
Rep. Martha Roby retired.[9] Her seat, representing a strongly Republican district, was considered safe red.[6]
No candidate won a majority of the vote in the Republican primary, thus triggering a runoff.[7] For the latter election held on July 14, candidate Barry Moore won with 60% of the vote.
Democrat Phyllis Harvey-Hall won the primary with over half of the votes casted.[7]
Moore won the general election by over thirty points.[8]
Democrat Terri Sewell ran for re-election. Sewell voted in favor of the impeachment coup. Her seat was expected to be a safe hold, given the 6th congressional district to be very liberal.[6]
Sewell handily won re-election with no opponents in the general election.[8]
Don Young, the establishment RINO career politician who has represented Alaska's at-large district since 1973, ran for re-election to a 25th consecutive House term.[10] His seat was considered vulnerable, though leaned towards his favor.[6]
Rep. Young was renominated in the Republican primary with just over three-quarters of the votes cast.[11]
The Democrat primary was won by Independent candidate Alyse Galvin with 81% of the vote.[11] It's important to note that the primary elections for the Democratic Party, Libertarian Party, along with independent candidates were merged into one.[Citation Needed]
Young won re-election with 57% of the vote.[12]
Democrat Tom O'Halleran, an establishmentarian, sought reelection. O'Halleran voted for the impeachment sham resolution. He was backed by the DCCC,[13] which repeated the false narrative of him being "moderate". While his district has been carried by Donald Trump in the 2016 U.S. presidential election by 1% of the vote,[14] Politico, the Cook Political Report, and RCP marked the seat as "Lean Democrat".[6] O'Halleran faced a moderately strong challenge from Tiffany Shedd,[15] a bilingual kindergarten teacher, farmer, and small business owner.[16][17] She has received the endorsement of the Susan B. Anthony List.[18]
In early September 2020, Shedd joined Sen. Martha McSally and Arizona state Republican party chair Kelli Ward in Flagstaff, Arizona at the local Republican field office to welcome a Women for Trump bus tour.[19]
A debate for the House election was held in early October 2020.[20]
O'Halleran was renominated with nearly 60% of the vote.[21]
The Republican primary was won by Shedd, who garnered 54.4% of the votes casted.[21]
Despite strong Republican efforts, O'Halleran won re-election to a third House term by a close margin.[22][23]
Establishment Democrat Ann Kirkpatrick ran for re-election. Kirkpatrick voted for the impeachment sham. The increasingly unreliable Cook Political Report considered her seat to be "Safe D", though RCP predicted that it was only leaned in favor of a Democrat win.[6]
Rep. Kirkpatrick won the primary over a challenger with just over three-quarters of the vote.[21]
In a strongly contested Republican primary election, candidate Brandon Martin won with a plurality of 43.3% of the vote.[21] A strong conservative and U.S. Army veteran,[24] Martin received the endorsement of President Trump for his bid, for which he said he was "proud and honored" to have.[25]
Kirkpatrick won re-election over Martin by around ten percentage points.[23][26]
Anti-establishment Republican Paul Gosar ran for re-election. He voted against the sham impeachment, and was expected to easily win re-election.[6]
Gosar has called for defunding NPR.[27]
Rep. Gosar faced a relatively strong primary challenge from Anne Marie Ward, and won with 63% of the vote.[21] While strongly conservative, he has been criticized for previously denouncing the police following the death of George Floyd.[28]
The Democrat primary was won by Delina DiSanto with 74% of the vote.[21]
Gosar handily won re-election to another House term.[23][29]
Republican David Schweikert ran for re-election. Schweitkert voted against the sham impeachment resolution. After being reprimanded and fined $50,000 over campaign finance violations,[30] he faced an uphill re-election bid for another House term, with some having considered his seat a tossup.[6]
Schweikert faced no primary opponents, winning uncontested.[21]
Among the Democrat candidates who ran to challenge Rep. Schweikert included Anita Malik, who previously ran against the representative in the 2018 Midterms. Despite being a strong candidate, she finished second place to Hiral Tipirneni, who got 53% of the vote.[21]
Despite his ethics violations, Schweikert narrowly won re-election.[23][31]
Democrat representative Greg Stanton ran for re-election. Stanton voted in favor of the impeachment coup, a decision he defended at a debate prior to the general election.[32] His seat was considered a safe Democrat hold.[6]
Stanton was backed by the globalist Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Rep. Stanton was unopposed in the Democrat primary.[21]
The Republican primary was won by Dave Giles, who garnered 54% of the votes casted.[21]
Stanton won re-election to a second House term.[23][34]
Rep. French Hill ran for re-election. Hill voted against the sham articles of impeachment. Representing a district Trump won by a considerably smaller margin compared to Arkansas' three other districts,[14] his seat was expected to be vulnerable.[6]
Hill won the Republican primary uncontested.[35]
Joyce Elliott ran unopposed in the Democrat primary.[35]
Despite predictions of a "tossup", Hill won re-election by an eleven-point margin.[36]
Under California law regarding congressional elections, all candidates irrespective of political party affiliation in each House race competed in one primary election prior to the general elections, with the top two competing in the latter.
Republican Doug LaMalfa ran for re-election. LaMalfa voted against the sham articles of impeachment, and was expected to retain his seat.[6]
LaMalfa was renominated with 55.1% of the vote.[37] Finishing second place was Democrat Audrey Denney.
LaMalfa won re-election with 57% of the votes cast.[38]
Democrat Jared Huffman ran for re-election. Huffman is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham resolution. Extremely far-left, he joined other progressive members of Congress in sending a letter to Alex Azar requesting for allowing aborted fetal tissue to be used in scientific research for a coronavirus vaccine.[39] Representing a highly liberal district that Donald Trump had lost to Hillary Clinton by over 40 points in the 2016 presidential race,[14] Huffman's seat was expected to be a safe hold.[6]
Rep. Huffman was re-nominated with 68% of the vote, with second place being Republican Dale Mensing.[37]
Huffman easily won re-election.[38]
Incumbent white privileged Democrat John Garamendi sought re-election. Garmendi is running against Republican Tamika Hamilton, an African American woman. Hamilton served in the United States Air Force beginning in 2002 and is a strong Trump supporter.[40]
Garamendi won re-election by eleven percentage points.[38]
Republican representative Tom McClintock ran for re-election. McClintock voted against the sham articles of impeachment. His seat was considered "Likely Republican" by both fake and somewhat more accurate election ratings.[6]
Rep. McClintock was renominated with just over 51% of the vote.[37] Finishing second place was Democrat Brynne Kennedy.
McClintock won re-election with 56% of the vote.[38]
Establishment Republican representative Paul Cook retired. The seat has been marked by several election ratings as a safe hold.[6]
No candidate won a majority of the votes in the primary, with Republican businessman and video game developer Jay Obernolte obtaining a plurality of 35.1% of the vote and Democrat Christine Bubser finishing in second place with 28.7%.[37]
Obernolte won the general election with 56% of the vote over Bubser.[38]
Incumbent Democrat Josh Harder sought reelection. Harder voted for the impeachment sham resolution. In a 2017 fundraiser, a Hispanic activist who attended alleged "blatant racism" by the "rich, white, ostensibly concerned Democrats" present there.[41] Harder has flip-flopped on abortion, stating at one point that he would be in favor of murdering unborn children up until the point of birth,[42] then later backtracked, insisting that he "misunderstood" the specific context.[43] His victory in the 2018 Midterms was potentially due to election fraud.[44] While the district only leaned in favor of Democrats and voted for Hillary Clinton by a 3% margin in the 2016 presidential election,[14] multiple election ratings, some of them increasingly unreliable, marked the seat as being a likely to safe hold.[6]
Harder was backed by the Chamber of Commerce.[33]
While no candidate obtained a majority of the votes in the primary, Harder was renominated with 43.3% of the vote; Republican Ted Howze finished second place.[37]
Representing an increasingly Democrat-favoring district in liberal California, Harder won re-election over Howze by over ten points.[38]
The mob rule-backing, often insane career politician Nancy Pelosi ran for re-election. Pelosi led her party line majority in the 116th U.S. House of Representatives to bring about the impeachment coup against President Trump.
Targeted by the more "progressive" AOC with her own party line identity politics, Pelosi was called a "racist" for rebuking several radical freshman representatives' far-left politics.[45]
A liberal hypocrite, Pelosi urged Donald Trump to take actions to combat the coronavirus after leading a Deep state coup to attempt removing him.[46]
Pelosi's district was reported in 2018 to be littered with needles and human waste.[47]
Despite such, the House Speaker was expected to win re-election, representing one of America's most liberal congressional districts.[6]
Rep. Pelosi was easily renominated with over 70% of the votes casted.[37]
Pelosi handily won re-election.[38]
Democrat Barbara Lee ran for re-election. Lee is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the impeachment coup. She was expected to handily win re-election.[6]
Rep. Lee was renominated.
Lee easily won re-election in a landslide.[38]
Democrat Jackie Speier ran for re-election. Speier voted for the impeachment sham resolution, is a sponsor of the totalitarian Green New Deal, and employed the Awan brothers in the Democrat IT scandal. Her seat was expected to be a safe hold.[6]
Speier was re-nominated with over 70% of the vote; finishing second place was Republican Ran Petel.[37]
Speier won re-election with 80% of the vote.[38]
Rep. Swalwell ran for re-election.
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Having survived primary challenges after his failed presidential bid and the humiliating Fartgate scandal,[48] incumbent Democrat Rep. Eric Swalwell ran for re-election. Swalwell is a far-left Democrat who voted for the impeachment sham resolution. Swalwell has been accused of witness tampering in the Trump-Russia probe.[49] Despite such, he is expected to win re-election.[6]
Swalwell was renominated with nearly 60% of the vote; finishing second place was Republican Alison Hayden.[37]
Despite being a laughingstock, Swalwell easily won another House term, winning with 71% of the vote.[38]
Democrat Jim Costa ran for re-election. Costa voted for the impeachment sham resolution against President Trump. His seat was expected to be a safe blue hold.[6]
Rep. Costa was renominated with 37.5% of the vote, with Republican Kevin Cookingham finishing second at 35.6%.[37]
Costa won re-election by around a twenty-point margin.[38]
Democrat Ro Khanna ran for re-election. Khanna is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham resolution against Donald Trump. He was expected to win re-election, representing a very left-wing district.[6]
Khanna was renominated with almost 70% of the vote.[37]
Rep. Khanna won re-election with 71% of the votes cast.[38]
Democrat Anna Eshoo ran for re-election. Rep. Eshoo voted in favor of the impeachment coup. She was expected to easily win re-election.[6]
Eshoo was renominated with 61.7% of the vote.[37]
Rep. Eshoo was handily re-elected.[38]
Democrat Jimmy Panetta ran for re-election. Panetta is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham resolution. Representing a highly liberal congressional district, he was expected to handily win re-election to another House term.[6]
Panetta was renominated with over 60% of the vote; finishing in second place was Republican Jeff Gorman.[37]
Panetta easily won the general election with 77% of the votes cast.[38]
Incumbent Democrat TJ Cox sought reelection to a second term. Cox voted for the impeachment sham resolution. He faced an ethics complaint after heading to the Yosemite National Park for a personal trip despite claiming it was for official government business.[50] Cox faced a strong challenge from Moderate Republican David Valadao,[51] who previously represented the district from 2013 to 2019 before losing to Cox in the 2018 Midterms by less than one percentage point.[52] Cox has hypocritically claimed that Valadao is a "yes man" for Donald Trump[53] despite that he has voted along with Nancy Pelosi 100% of the time in the 116th U.S. Congress.[54] It's also important to note that Valadao has opposed Trump in the 2016 U.S. presidential election[55] though currently is more supportive of the president.[Citation Needed]
Cox has avoided tax payments and falsely claimed under penalty of perjury one million dollars in a second Maryland home as his primary residence.[56] In a conflict of interest, he previously voted in March 2020 to block a bill that would require members of Congress to disclose their tax liens.[57]
While the district voted for Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential race by just over fifteen points,[14] the seat was marked by several election ratings as a "tossup", with Valadao having been considered a strong potential to regain his old seat.[6]
Cox received the endorsement of the globalist Chamber of Commerce.[33]
While Rep. Cox was re-nominated, he finished second in the primary, trailing Valadao by over 10 percentage points.[37]
Having consistently held a narrow lead since Election Night,[58] Valadao currently leads Cox by a narrow margin,[38][59] and was declared the winner of the race on November 27, 2020.[60]
Republican Devin Nunes ran for re-election. Nunes strongly opposed and voted against the impeachment sham resolution. Despite having faced strong efforts from Democrats to flip the seat, he was largely expected to likely retain his position,[6] representing a mostly Republican district.
Nunes was renominated with over 50% of the vote; finishing second was Democrat Phil Arballo.[37]
Nunes won re-election for a tenth House term.[38][61]
Republican House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy ran for re-election. McCarthy was a leader against the impeachment coup. His seat was expected to be a safe hold.[6]
Both McCarthy and a Democrat challenger were running unopposed in the primary.[37]
Rep. McCarthy handily retained his seat for another House term.[38][62]
A special election runoff preceding the general election to fill the vacancy left by resignation of Democrat lesbian white supremacist Katie Hill was held on May 12, 2020. Democratic Socialist Cenk Uygur and Republican George Papadopoulos were among more than a dozen candidates eliminated in primary special election.
Democrat Christy Smith won the primary with 31.7% of the vote; finishing second was Republican Mike Garcia with 23.9% of the vote.[37]
Smith beat Garcia in the special election, but since no candidate won a majority of the votes, a runoff followed on May 12, 2020,[37] where Garcia won by a margin of 12% of the vote.[63] Election ratings, most becoming increasingly unreliable, have considered the seat to be a "Tossup".[6]
With around 99% of the expected vote reporting, Garcia currently leads Smith by 0.06% in the general election, holding an extremely narrow 219-vote lead.[38][64]
Democrat Judy Chu ran for re-election. Chu is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the impeachment coup against President Trump. Representing a very liberal district, she was expected to win easily.[6]
A poster child for DACA, Chu was arrested in December 2017 along with other activists in Washington D.C. for "crowding, obstructing, or incommoding".[65]
In justifying the communist Medicare for All, Chu stated that she believes "healthcare is a human right".[66] She is apparently ignorant of the fact that nothing that requires the work of others is a human right.
Rep. Chu was part of many progressive representatives who co-sponsored the totalitarian Green New Deal.[67]
Chu, along with other House Democrats, have accused the FBI of racial bias amidst ongoing investigations into potential spies for the Chinese government.[68]
A liberal snowflake, Rep. Chu whined over Kevin McCarthy's correct usage of the term "Chinese coronavirus", calling it "xenophobic".[69]
Rep. Chu was easily renominated with 70.4% of the vote.[37]
Chu easily won re-election.[38]
Adam Schiff (nicknamed "Little Adam Sch**t" by Donald Trump[70]), the leader in the impeachment coup to attempt removing President Trump and protect the Deep State, ran for re-election.[71] His seat was marked as a safe hold.[6]
A backer of mob rule, Schiff said that "the president's misconduct cannot be decided at the ballot box."[72]
Known for his stupid and absurd statements, Schiff said that Donald Trump could "offer Alaska to the Russians" and "move to Mar-a-Lago permanently and let Jared Kushner run the country" if not removed.[73] Schiff has faced increasing criticism in the wake of Obamagate revelations.
Among the Republicans challenging Schiff included Eric Early, who said that he wanted to send "the viper [Schiff] into retirement".[74]
Schiff faced a primary challenged by drag queen Maebe A. Girl.[75]
Schiff was renominated with nearly 60% of the votes casted.[37]
Despite his corruption, Schiff won re-election with 73% of the vote in the general election.[38]
Democrat Ted Lieu ran for re-election. Lieu is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the sham impeachment of President Trump. Lieu defended Hunter Biden receiving $50,000 a month kickbacks in the Biden-Burisma scandal, half of which were paid to Hunter's father, Joe Biden.[76]
A liberal hypocrite, Lieu proclaims to support free speech but said that he would "love to be able to regulate the content of speech".[77]
A diehard believer of the Trump-Russia conspiracy theory, Lieu claimed that Donald Trump "obstructed justice".[78]
On February 28, 2020, Lieu provoked a meaningless tension in a hearing where he asked Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on whether the coronavirus is a hoax or not.[79]
Lieu claimed that the usage of the term "Wuhan Virus" is an example of myopia.[80] His "woke virtue signaling" was quickly called out by Republican Dan Crenshaw.[81]
Rep. Lieu was renominated with 60% of the votes casted; finishing second is Republican James Bradley.[37]
Lieu won re-election with 68% of the vote.[38]
Democrat Karen Bass ran for re-election. Rep. Bass is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham resolution. Representing an extremely liberal district, she was expected to retain her seat.[6]
Bass was renominated with 88% of the vote.[37]
Despite being extremely far-left, Rep. Bass handily won re-election with 86% of the vote.[38]
Democrat Linda Sanchez ran for re-election. Sanchez is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham resolution. Her seat was expected to be retained.[6]
Neither Sanchez nor a Democrat challenger were faced with additional opponents.[37]
Sanchez won re-election with three-quarters of the votes cast.[38]
Democrat Gil Cisneros, a member of the Gang of Nine,[82] sought relection. Cisneros bought his seat with lottery winnings and was accused of sexual harassment by another candidate for lower office, "inviting" himself to her hotel room and demanding sex in exchange for a donation to her campaign fund.[83] Cisneros is a member of the far-left Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham. While increasingly unreliable election ratings ranked him as being favored to retain his seat,[6] an upset was considered possible.
While Cisneros was re-nominated, he trailed Republican challenger Young Kim by 2%.[37]
Despite the seat being largely expected to be a Democrat hold, Gil Cisneros trailed Young Kim by 1.2% of the vote with 99% reporting,[38][84] and the race was called for Kim on November 13, 2020;[85] this was despite the Cook Political Report rating the election as "Likely D".
Democrat Mark Takano ran for re-election. Takano is a vice-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the sham impeachment resolution. His seat was marked by several election ratings as a safe blue hold.[6]
Rep. Takano was renominated with just over 50% of the vote; finishing second was Republican Aja Smith.[37]
Takano handily won re-election.[38]
The insane, often idiotic Democrat Maxine Waters ran for re-election. Waters is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham resolution.
Regarded by some as loud-mouthed and outrageous, Waters has asserted her "right" to be angry and also said that the Tea Party "can go straight to hell".[86] The representative has been calling since 2017 to "IMPEACH 45!!"[87] Conservative commentator Candace Owens accurately noted that the congresswoman has a "low IQ".[88]
Rep. Waters was duped by a phone prank in early January 2020.[89] The joke was orchestrated by two Russian pranksters pretending to be Greta Thunberg and her father, advocating for the ecology of "Chunga Chonga island", even somehow managing to convince Waters that they had "proof" of President Trump committing "quid pro quo".
Waters absurdly and ironically proclaimed in March 2020 that she thinks that President Trump "cannot be relied upon" and should "shut his mouth".[90]
Rep. Waters faced a strong challenge from Republican Navy veteran Joe Collins despite election ratings marking the seat as a safe Democrat hold.[6] Collins issued a powerful campaign ad highlighting the failures of the fifteen term Congresswoman.[91]
According to Waters, black supporters of Donald Trump who leave the Democrat plantation are "shameful".[92]
Waters was renominated with over 70% of the vote.[37]
Waters won re-election with 72% of the vote over Collins.[38]
Democrat Nanette Barragan ran for re-election. Barragan is a member of the CPC and voted for the impeachment sham resolution. She was expected to win re-election.[6]
Barragan was renominated with 63.2% of the votes casted.[37]
Barragan won re-election with almost 70% of the vote.[38]
Incumbent progressive Democrat Katie Porter ran for re-election. Porter is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham resolution. Her seat was marked by several election ratings as being safe,[6] despite the district represented previously by Republican Mimi Walters, who lost re-election in the 2018 Midterms.
Porter was renominated with just over half of the votes casted; finishing second is Republican Greg Raths.[37]
Porter won re-election with 53.5% of the vote.[38]
Incumbent Democrat Harley Rouda sought reelection. Rouda took $4.5 million in campaign contributions from Michael Bloomberg[93] and voted for the House impeachment sham against President Trump. A liberal hypocrite, he advocated for health care and retirement benefits yet slashed them as a real estate executive.[94][95] Rouda's companies also faced tax liens that amounted to hundreds of thousands of dollars.[96] His seat was marked by most election ratings as "Lean Democrat", though a flip towards the Republicans was considered possible.[6]
Rouda apparently believes the ridiculous notion that President Trump is comparable to Adolf Hitler;[97] note that if such were the case, CNN would no longer exist.
Rep. Rouda was backed by the Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Rouda was renominated with less than 50% of the vote; finishing second was Republican Michelle Steel.[37]
Despite mostly expected to be favored in the general election, Rouda lost to Steel by a narrow margin.[38][98] Following her victory, Steel said: "I stand for the American dream."[99]
Incumbent Progressive Democrat Mike Levin ran for re-election. Levin is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham resolution. He is also a supporter of the totalitarian Green New Deal and sits on the alleged Climate Crisis Committee. His seat was marked as a safe blue hold.[6]
Neither Levin nor a Republican challenger were faced with additional opponents.[37]
Levin won re-election with 53% of the vote.[38]
The seat is currently vacant. Election ratings have, on average, marked the seat as being "Likely Republican".[6]
Democrat Ammar Campa-Najjar finished first in the primary with 36.5% of the vote; finishing second was Republican Darrell Issa,[37] who previously served in the House from the 49th district before retiring in the 2018 Midterms. Issa is strongly pro-Trump and was noted by the Washington Post to be "one of Democrats’ chief antagonists".[100]
Issa won the election with 54% of the vote.[38]
Joe Neguse, the Democrat from Colorado's 2nd district, ran for re-election. Neguse is a vice chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment coup. He was expected to easily win re-election, representing a liberal district.[6]
Rep. Neguse ran unopposed his party's primary election.[101]
Charles Winn won the Republican primary, facing no other challengers.[101]
Neguse handily won re-election with over 60% of the votes cast.[102]
Republican representative Scott Tipton ran for re-election. Rep. Tipton voted against the impeachment coup. The seat was marked by several election ratings as "Likely Republican".[6]
Tipton was defeated in the primary by Lauren Boebert, an anti-establishment strong conservative.[101] When was asked who she considered her actual opponent: Tipton or New York Democrat Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Boebert responded: "I’m absolutely running against her."[103]
The Democrat primary was won by Diane Mitsch Bush, who garnered just over 60% of the vote.[101] She portrayed herself as being more "moderate" despite having previously ran for office as a far-leftist.[104]
Despite polling that had Bush narrowly leading, Boebert won by a six-point margin.[102][105]
Incumbent anti-establishment Republican Ken Buck ran for re-election. Buck voted against the sham impeachment articles. His seat was considered to be a safe red hold.[6] Buck faced Colorado Democratic Party's Congressional District 4 candidate Ike McCorkle.
Rep. Buck won his party's primary election unopposed.[101]
The Democrat primary was won by Ike McCorkle, who faced no other opponents.[101] Kris Jacks, chair of Our Revolution Weld County, who threatens assassination and murder of political opponents, is a member of the Colorado Democratic Party's Congressional District 4 Committee, the Colorado Democratic Party Executive Committee Central Committee, and dozens of other committees.[106][107]
Buck won re-election with 60% of the vote.[102]
Incumbent establishment Democrat Jason Crow, a member of the Gang of Nine,[82] ran for re-election. Crow voted for the House impeachment sham of President Trump, having been a selected manager for the coup. He was elected in the 2018 Midterms, defeating conservative Republican then-incumbent Mike Coffman by a large margin[108] after the latter had continuously voiced opposition to Trump and was betrayed by the Congressional Leadership Fund.[109] Rep. Crow's final words in arguing for removing President Trump from office included citing a quote from a Harry Potter book.[110] His seat was marked by election ratings as being mostly a safe blue hold.[6]
Crow won the Democrat primary unopposed.[101]
The only Republican running to challenge Rep. Crow was Steve House.[101]
Despite the district having previously been more Republican, Crow won re-election by a seventeen-point margin.[102]
Joe Courtney, the Democrat Party representative from Connecticut's 2nd district, ran for re-election. Courtney voted in favor of the impeachment coup against Donald Trump. He was expected to handily retain his seat.[6]
Courtney ran unopposed in his party's primary.[111]
An extremely contested primary election followed between Republican candidates Thomas Gilmer and Justin Anderson; the latter ended up in the lead by a mere 15 vote margin.[112]
Courtney won re-election with just under 60% of the vote.[113]
Incumbent Democrat representative Rosa DeLauro ran for re-election. DeLauro is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the impeachment sham. Her seat was expected to be a safe blue hold.[6]
Rep. DeLauro ran unopposed.[111]
The Republican primary was won by Margaret Streicker, who ran uncontested.[111]
DeLauro handily won re-election.[113]
Left-wing Democrat Jahana Hayes seeks reelection. Hayes is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham. Despite running in the 2018 Midterms on an opposition to Nancy Pelosi as House Speaker,[114] she changed her mind after being elected.[115] While some have considered the seat to be somewhat vulnerable compared to the rest of the U.S. House seats in Connecticut, Hayes is expected to win re-election.[6]
Rep. Hayes won her party's primary election uncontested.[111]
The Republican primary was won by David Sullivan, who ran unopposed.[111]
Hayes won re-election by over ten points.[113]
Lisa Blunt Rochester, the liberal Democrat representative from Delaware's at-large district, ran for re-election;[116] the primaries were be held on September 15, 2020.[117] The seat was expected to be a safe blue hold.[6] Rochester is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the sham impeachment.
Rochester was renominated with no primary challengers.
The Republican primary was won by candidate Lee Murphy with just under three-quarters of the votes cast.[118]
Rochester won re-election to a third House term.[119]
Anti-establishment Republican representative Matt Gaetz of Florida's 1st district ran for re-election. Gaetz voted against the impeachment sham. The seat was expected to be a safe red hold.[6]
Gaetz was easily re-nominated with 81% of the vote.[120]
The Democrat primary was won by Phil Ehr, who ran uncontested.[120]
Gaetz won re-election by a thirty-point margin.[121]
Incumbent Ted Yoho, the Republican representative from Florida's 3rd district, retired. Several election ratings projected the seat to be a safe red hold.[6]
The Republican primary was won by Kat Cammack with a plurality of 25% of the votes cast in a heavily contested election.[120]
The Democrat primary election was won by Adam Christensen with a plurality of 34% of the vote.[120] Christensen has publicly posted Cammack's home address information after she voiced concerns of Antifa violence, and doubled down after Twitter deleted it.[122]
Cammack handily won the general election by over ten points to succeed Yoho.[121]
Democrat representative Darren Soto ran for re-election. Soto is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the sham impeachment articles. His seat was marked as mostly being a safe hold.[6]
Soto was renominated in the Democrat primary uncontested.[120]
The Republican primary was won by William Olson with a plurality of just under 50% of the votes cast.[120]
Soto won re-election by a twelve-point margin.[121]
Rep. Demings ran for re-election.
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Establishment Democrat Val Demings seeks re-election. Demings has previously been mentioned as prospective vice presidential pick for the mentally impaired Democrat them-putative nominee Joe Biden. She is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and served as a House manager for the impeachment coup against Donald Trump. During an impeachment hearing, Rep. Demings mentioned her ancestry from slaves despite it having no relevance to the charges brought against Trump.[123] Her seat is considered a safe hold.[6]
Demings was renominated with no primary challengers.[120]
The Republican primary was won by Vennia Francois with 65% of the vote.[120]
Demings won re-election with 64% of the vote over Francois.[121]
Gus M. Bilirakis, the Republican representative from Florida's 12th district, sought re-election. Bilirakis voted against the impeachment coup against Donald Trump. He was expected to retain his seat.[6]
Biliarkis was renominated with no primary challengers.[120]
The Democrat primary was won by Kimberly Walker, who ran unopposed.[120]
Rep. Bilirakis won re-election by over twenty points.[121]
Democrat Charlie Crist, the former governor of Florida currently serving as the U.S. representative from the state's 13th congressional district, ran for re-election. Crist voted in favor of the impeachment sham resolutions. Having faced a strong challenge in the general election, RCP considered the seat to only "lean" in favor of the Democrats while the increasingly liberal Cook Political Report claimed that it was a "safe" hold.[6]
Rep. Crist was renominated with no primary challengers.[120]
In a heavily contested Republican primary election, Anna Paulina Luna finished first place with a plurality of 31% of the votes casted.[120]
Despite having been expected to easily win re-election, Crist only managed to defeat Luna by six points.[121]
Establishment-backed[124] Republican Ross Spano ran for re-election to another House term. The seat was ranked by most election ratings as "lean" Republican.[6]
In an upset, Spano was defeated in the Republican primary in a close race[120] by challenger Scott Franklin, a naval aviator and businessman.[125] This was after the former had been investigated for campaign finance violations,[126] the reason Franklin attributed to his bid; he had previously supported Spano during the 2018 Midterms.
The Democrat primary was won by Alan Cohn with 41% of the vote.[120]
Despite some who expected a closer race, Franklin won by nearly a ten-point margin.[121]
Vern Buchanan, the Republican representative from Florida's 16th district, ran for re-election. Buchanan voted against the impeachment coup. His seat was marked as "Likely Republican" by election ratings sites.[6]
Buchanan faced a challenge from Democrat state representative Margaret Good, who once voted against banning child sex dolls and insisted that such was a "mistake";[127] unsurprisingly, she is a champion for the far-left ACLU and was backed by the Democrat establishment.
Rep. Buchanan was renominated with no primary challengers.[120]
The Democrat primary was won by Good, who ran uncontested.[120]
Buchanan handily defeated Good in the general election by eleven points.[121]
Brian Mast of Florida's 18th district ran for re-election. Mast voted against the sham impeachment articles. His House seat was considered to mostly be safe.[6]
Rep. Mast won the Republican primary with 86% of the votes cast.[120]
Pam Keith won the Democrat primary with 80% of the vote to challenge Mast in the November general election.[120] Backed by the House campaign wing of the Democrat establishment, she has tweeted whether it's "open season" on Donald Trump and officials surrounding him.[128]
Mast won re-election with 56% of the vote.[121]
Having faced a strong challenge from Republican Laura Loomer, Democrat Lois Frankel sought re-election. Frankel is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the impeachment sham resolutions. Increasingly liberal and phony election ratings sites have marked the seat as being a safe blue hold,[6] though some speculated that the race may potentially become closer than expected.
Rep. Frankel was easily renominated with over 80% of the vote.[120]
In a major upset, the anti-establishment Loomer won the Republican primary with a plurality of just over 40% of the votes casted.[120]
Frankel defeated Loomer by twenty points in the general election.[121]
Disgraced DNC hack Debbie Wasserman Schultz ran for re-election. Wasserman Schultz voted in favor of the impeachment sham. Despite her corruption, the seat was considered a safe hold.[6]
Rep. Wasserman Schultz easily won her primary over challenger Jennifer Perelman with 72% of the vote.[120] She was previously accused by Perelman for verbally attacking and shoving a 16 year-old volunteering for the latter,[129] something for which the representative received a police report filed against her.[130]
The Republican primary election was won by Carla Spalding with just over half of the votes casted.[120]
Wasserman Schultz won re-election with 58% of the votes cast.[121]
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Democrat Debbie Mucarsel-Powell sought re-election to a second House term. Mucarsel-Powell is a member of the extreme Congressional Progressive Caucus and is a supporter of the totalitarian Green New Deal. She voted for the impeachment sham resolution. A freshman representative in the 116th United States Congress, she was elected in the 2018 Midterms, defeating Republican then-incumbent Carlos Curbelo by a close margin[131] after the latter frequently voiced opposition to Donald Trump and pushed for liberal legislation.[132] Despite representing a liberal-leaning district that favored Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election by a sixteen-point margin,[14] the seat was considered to be a tossup.[6]
Mucarsel-Powell's husband was reported to have been paid $700,000 by a Ukrainian oligarch.[133] In early August 2020, the FBI raided two business entities owned by the oligarch.[134]
The congressional district consists of the entirety of Monroe County as well as part of Miami-Dade County.
Rep. Mucarsel-Powell was renominated with no primary challengers.[120]
The Republican primary was won by Carlos Giménez with 60% of the votes cast.[120] Giménez is the currently mayor of Miami-Dade County and a retired firefighter who has endorsed Hillary Clinton in the 2016 U.S. presidential election but later embraced Donald Trump and received the president's endorsement.[135] A strong candidate, he was attacked by the DCCC.[136]
Despite the Cook Political Report rating the general election as "Lean Democrat", Giménez won in a major upset, unseating Mucarsel-Powell in winning by a three-percent margin.[121] The representative later had reportedly cried at a Democrat conference call because people were being "negative" on Twitter.[137]
Freshman Democrat and former Clinton Foundation president Donna Shalala ran for re-election. Shalala voted in favor of the impeachment coup. She was elected in the 2018 Midterms to succeed retiring anti-Trump RINO Ileana Ros-Lehtinen; the district is liberal-leaning and was carried by Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election by twenty points, though has became more competitive. While increasingly unreliable election ratings considered the seat to mostly be a safe blue hold,[6] an upset was considered possible.
Shalala won her party's primary uncontested.[120]
The Republican primary was won by Maria Elvira Salazar with just under 80% of the vote.[120]
In a major upset, Salazar won the general election over the incumbent Shalala by a narrow margin[121][138] despite the seat being rated as "Likely Democrat".
Sanford Bishop, a liberal Democrat, ran for re-election. Bishop voted for the impeachment coup against President Trump. His seat was considered by election ratings sites to be a safe hold.[6]
Rep. Bishop ran unopposed in his party's primary election.[139]
The Republican primary was won by Don Cole, who garnered just over 50% of the vote.[139]
Bishop handily won re-election by around a twenty-point margin.[140]
Incumbent pro-abortionist John Lewis initially faced national best-selling author, widely acclaimed television personality, and proponent of criminal justice reform Angela Stanton-King, the God-daughter of Alveda King.[141] However, he died on July 17, 2020 at the age of 80, having suffered from pancreatic cancer.[142]
The seat was rated as a safe Democrat hold.[6] Abortion, which has exterminated over 15 million Black lives,[143] was a major issue.[144]
Prior to his death, Lewis won his party's primary with 87% of the vote.[139] However, because he had died after being renominated, the Georgia Democratic Party had to nominate another candidate for the general election; candidate Nikema Williams was selected by a forty-five member executive committee to be the nominee.
Stanton-King won the Republican primary unopposed.[139]
Williams easily won the election with 85% of the vote.[140]
Establishment Democrat Lucy McBath ran for reelection. McBath voted for the impeachment sham of President Trump. In late March 2020, she set up a town hall using a phone number from Tennessee;[145] McBath has previously faced accusations of carpetbagging.
The congressional district was previously represented by Republican Tom Price, who resigned to serve in the Trump Administration. A special election was held, where Karen Handel won over Democrat candidate Jon Ossoff to fill the vacancy for the remainder of the 115th United States Congress.
While the election was initially considered a "tossup", some election "experts" including the Cook Political Report later rated it "Likely D".[6]
Rep. McBath ran unopposed in the Democrat primary.[139]
The Republican primary was won by Handel, who previously represented the congressional district before being defeated by McBath in the 2018 Midterms; she garnered 75% of the vote to proceed to the general election in attempting to reclaim her old seat.[139]
Representing an affluent, increasingly liberal district, McBath won re-election over Handel in a rematch of the 2018 Midterms by nine points.[140]
Republican representative Rob Woodall retired. The congressional district, despite being once more Republican-favoring, has become increasingly liberal. Several election ratings rated it as leaning towards a flip for the Democrats,[6] though RCP only considered it a "tossup".
The Republican primary election was won by Rich McCormick, who garnered 55% of the vote.[139]
The Democrat primary was won by Carolyn Bourdeaux, who won with 53% of the votes casted.[139] Bourdeaux previously had almost managed to unseat Woodall in the 2018 Midterms by an extremely close margin when the representative's seat was considered to be leaned in his favor then.
Bourdeaux won the election by a narrow margin, flipping the House seat towards the Democrats' side.[140]
Rep. Doug Collins, the conservative Republican from Georgia's 9th congressional district, announced that he would not seek re-election to another House term and instead would run in the 2020 special election to challenge establishment interim Kelly Loeffler for her Senate seat she was appointed to by Gov. Brian Kemp.[146] The House seat was considered safe Republican.[6]
In a heavily contested primary between many Republican candidates seeking to succeed Rep. Collins, Matt Gurtler finished in first place with 21% of the vote, and Andrew Clyde with 18.6%.[139] Since no candidate garnered a majority of the votes, a runoff between the top two-performing Gurtler and Clyde followed; the latter ultimately won with 56% of the votes casted.
Similar to the concurrent Republican primary, no candidate initially garnered a majority of the votes in the Democrat primary election.[139] In the following runoff, Devin Pandy won with nearly 70% of the vote.[139]
Clyde easily won the general election in a landslide to succeed Rep. Collins.[140]
Republican Tom Graves retired. The seat was considered a safe hold.[6]
No Republican initially garnered a majority of the vote in the primary, with Marjorie Taylor Greene finishing first place with 40% of the vote and John Cowan at 21%;[139] in the runoff that followed, Greene won with 57% of the votes cast.
The Democrat primary was won by Kevin Van Ausdal, who ran uncontested.[139]
Greene easily won the general election with three-quarters of the vote.[140]
Incumbent Tulsi Gabbard retired. The district, being strongly Democrat-favoring, was rated as a safe hold.[6]
The Democrat primary was won by Kaiali'i Kahele, who garnered three-quarters of the votes casted to succeed Rep. Gabbard.[147]
The Republican primary was won by Joe Akana, who got 44% of the vote.[147]
As was expected, Kahele won the general election easily.[148]
Republican representative Russ Fulcher ran for re-election. Fulcher voted against the impeachment coup. His seat was considered a safe hold.[6]
Fulcher was renominated with 80% of the vote.[149]
The Democrat primary was won by Rudy Soto, who garnered 66% of the vote.[149]
Fulcher handily won re-election with two-thirds of the votes cast.[150]
Mike Simpson, the Republican representing Idaho's 2nd congressional district, ran for re-election. Rep. Simpson voted against the impeachment sham. Similar to Rep. Fulcher, his House seat was considered a safe retain for the Republican Party.[6]
Simpson was renominated with 72% of the vote.[149]
The Democrat primary was won by Aaron Swisher, who ran uncontested.[149]
Rep. Simpson won re-election with 63% of the vote over Swisher.[150]
Incumbent Rep. Dan Lipinski, who is known as a pro-life DINO, ran for re-election.[151] While Lipinski has voted for the radical Equality Act[152] and in favor of impeaching Donald Trump,[153] he has been overall been viewed as being a conservative-leaning moderate, not being left-wing enough for progressives like Marie Newman, who ran to unseat Lipinski.[154] However, these progressive efforts were met with setbacks, as the Democrat establishment faction Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee had laid down rules forbidding its workers from working with Democrat primary challengers.[155]
Despite pro-life efforts to bolster Rep. Lipinski's campaign, he lost to progressive challenger Marie Newman by a margin of less than 3% in the Democrat primary held on March 17, 2020.[156] Newman was backed by Justice Democrats and by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Prior to Newman's victory, the seat was rated as "Likely D", though it was changed to "Safe D" afterwards.[6]
The Republican primary was held on the same day as the Democrat primary, with Mike Fricilone winning with over 55% of the vote.[156]
Newman handily won the general election by over ten points.[157]
Democrat Sean Casten ran for re-election. He voted for the impeachment hoax.
Casten defended China's wet markets saying, “I think we need to be careful about laying all the blame on a particular cultural practice in a country that we don’t live in,” Casten said during a virtual town hall. “These viruses could hop from animals to humans, but you don’t shut that down just by shutting down a particular cultural practice that we aren’t familiar with.” His defense of wet markets, however, contradicts a scientific consensus dating back to 2006 that such markets pose a significant public health risk.[158]
The seat was rated as a safe hold for the Democratic Party.[6]
Republican Jeanne Ives won the primary by over 70% of the vote.[159]
Casten won re-election by a seven-point margin over Ives.[157]
Democrat Jan Schakowsky ran for re-election. Schakowsky is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham. Extremely pro-abortion with no regard for unborn children, she has called for allowing fetal tissue to be used in the research and development of a coronavirus vaccine.[160] Despite her radical agenda, the seat was expected to be a safe hold, given the district to be very liberal.[6]
Rep. Foster won the primary held on March 17, 2020, garnering over 50% of the vote.[159]
Republican Rick Laib won the primary, winning just over 53% of the vote.[159]
Despite being a far-leftist, Schakowsky was re-elected easily.[157]
Republican Rodney Davis ran for re-election. Davis voted against the impeachment sham.
Betsy Dirksen Londrigan won the Democrat primary, garnering over 70% of the vote.[159]
Despite the seat being considered a "tossup",[6] Davis won re-election by nine points.[157]
Democrat Lauren Underwood ran for re-election. Underwood voted for the impeachment sham.
Jim Oberweis won the highly contested Republican primary held on March 17, 2020, garnering just over 25% of the vote, enough to defeat three other candidates.[159]
Despite the seat considered to be mostly in Underwood's favor, with the Cook Political Report and Politico rating it "Likely D",[6] she only managed to defeat Oberweis by 1.3% of the vote.[157]
Republican Adam Kinzinger ran for re-election. Despite being an anti-Trump[161][162] Moderate Republican, Kizinger voted against the impeachment coup. He has taken several neocon/RINO[163] positions, including calling for gun control[164] and later opposing President Trump's plan to draw back several thousand troops from the Middle East.[165] His seat was mostly considered a safe hold.[6]
Kinzinger won renomination uncontested.[166]
The Democrat primary was won by candidate Dani Brzozowski, who ran unopposed.[166]
Kinzinger handily won re-election by thirty points.[157]
Democrat Cheri Bustos ran for re-election. Bustos voted for the impeachment sham. An establishmentarian, she was the chair of the DCCC for the 2020 elections. Under her leadership, House Democrats suffered tremendous defeats despite expecting to gain seats.[167] According to the left-wing representative, the defeats were the fault of Facebook and Google.[168] Following the general election results that emphasized gloom for House Democrats with their majority for the 117th Congress slashed, Bustos announced that she would step down from the campaign wing of the House Democrat establishment.[169] Tony Cardenas and Sean Patrick Maloney have announced their bids to succeed Bustos in the position.[170]
Esther Joy King won the Republican primary held on March 17, 2020, garnering over 60% of the vote.[159]
Despite Bustos' seat considered to mostly be safe,[6] she only managed to defeat King by four percentage points.[157]
Republican Darin LaHood ran for re-election. LaHood voted against the impeachment sham.
As was expected,[6] LaHood easily won re-election with 70.5% of the vote.[157]
Republican Jim Banks ran for re-election. Banks voted against the sham impeachment resolutions. A strong conservative, he has defended President Trump numerous times and opposed the neoconservative agenda of several moderates including Liz Cheney.[171] Banks also introduced a bill in August 2020 amidst the 2020 Leftwing insurrection to bar rioters from receiving federal benefits.[172]
Banks won his party's primary with 85% of the vote.[173]
Chip Coldiron won the Democrat primary with a plurality of 39% of the vote.[173]
Banks handily won re-election with two-thirds of the votes cast.[174]
Establishment Republican Susan Brooks retired.
The Republican primary was won by state senator Victoria Spartz, who garnered a plurality of 40% of the vote[173] despite having faced attacks her campaign referred to as "nasty, false, misogynistic".[175] Spartz is a naturalized U.S. citizen who immigrated from Ukraine to escape socialism, and has made fighting such a part of her campaign.[176] Liberals have harshly attacked her with Russophobic tropes. She has also expressed some support for President Trump, saying: "He’s a typical New Yorker — a straight-shooter. He may use social media too much and some people may not like his persona. But his policies are good for us."[177]
The DCCC has attacked Spartz.[178]
The Democrat primary was won by Christina Hale, who got a plurality of 40.6% of the votes casted.[173]
A debate between Spartz and Hale was held in late September 2020.[179]
Despite predictions of the seat possibly flipping towards the Democrats' column, Spartz won the general election by four points to succeed Rep. Brooks.[174]
Republican representative Greg Pence, the older brother of Vice President Mike Pence, ran re-election. Pence voted against the impeachment coup. He noted in early October 2020 the far-left agenda of the Biden/Harris agenda.[180]
Rep. Pence was renominated with 83.6% of the vote.[173]
The Democrat primary was won by Jeannine Lake with 70% of the vote.[173]
Rep. Pence easily won re-election.[174]
(won) |
(lost) |
Democrat incumbent Rep, Abby Finkenauer is seeking reelection. Finkenauer voted in favor of the sham articles of impeachment and faced a strong challenge from Republican State Rep. Ashley Hinson, who represents a swing legislative district and worked as a television journalist in Cedar Rapids. In early September 2020, Finkenauer claimed to support border security, which contradicted her previous votes to end President Trump's national emergency that was declared over constructing a southern border wall.[181] She also avoided directly answering on her support for late-term abortions.[182]
A campaign ad by Hinson in early October 2020 featured a police officer and Survivor contestant, who noted:
I don’t care what tribe you’re on, you can’t trust anyone who votes with Nancy Pelosi 93% of the time.[183] |
Finkenauer is backed by the globalist Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Rep. Finkenauer was re-nominated in the Democrat primary held on June 2, 2020 uncontested.[184]
Ashley Hinson won the Republican primary with 78% of the vote.[184]
Despite predictions of the seat being favored to be a Democrat hold, Hinson defeated Finkenauer by just over 2% as nearly all the votes were being counted.[185]
(won) |
(lost) |
Democrat Dave Loebsack, who had voted for the impeachment sham, did not run for re-election. Republican Mariannette Miller-Meeks, who previously ran multiple times unsuccessfully to unseat Loebsack, ran for the open seat.
The Democrat primary was won by Rita Hart, who ran unopposed.[184]
Miller-Meeks won the Republican primary with just under 50% of the vote.[184]
While the general election had not been called for weeks,[185] Miller-Meeks was declared the winner in early December by a margin of merely 6 votes following a requested recount.[186] Despite losing, Hart requested House Democrats to overturn and steal the election in her favor,[187] filing a notice of contest on December 22, 2020[188] rather than going to Iowa courts.[189]
(lost) |
(won) |
Democrat Cindy Axne ran for reelection. Axne voted for the impeachment sham against President Trump. Having engaged in liberal deceit, she ran as a moderate yet voted as a partisan Democrat.[190] Axne also has given her vote to far-left representative Jamie Raskin during the coronavirus pandemic after House Democrats allowed proxy voting.[191]
Axne received the endorsement of the Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Rep. Axne won the Democrat primary held on June 2, 2020 unopposed.[184]
David Young, the predecessor to Axne who lost re-election in the 2018 midterm elections,[192] won the Republican primary with just under 70% of the vote to face the freshman representative in a rematch for his old seat.[184] He received the praise of Donald Trump at a Trump rally in Des Moines on October 14, 2020.[193]
Axne won the general election over Young by a close margin,[194] mostly counting on support from liberal Polk County, which contains Iowa's capital.
Movement conservative Steve King, the only Republican representative from Iowa in the 116th U.S. Congress, ran for re-election. King, a prominent defender of Donald Trump, strongly opposed the impeachment coup.[195]
Liberal Wikipedia has initially covered the upcoming election in Iowa's 4th district in a very skewed manner,[196] citing a fake news poll administered in January 2019 that had a margin of error at ±4.5%.[197]
King, facing a primary heavily challenged by the establishment-backed Randy Feenstra, lost by just under 10% of the vote in a major upset.[184]
J.D. Scholten, the 2018 loser to Rep. King,[198] ran for and won the Democrat primary uncontested.[184]
Feenstra handily won the general election with over 60% of the vote to succeed Rep. King.[194]
Republican representative Roger Marshall retired to run for U.S. Senate.
The Republican primary was won by former lieutenant governor Tracey Mann with 54% of the vote.[199]
The Democrat primary was won by Kailee Barnett with 63% of the vote.[199]
Mann easily won the general election with over 70% of the vote to succeed Marshall.[200]
Republican representative Steve Watkins ran for re-election. Watkins voted against the impeachment sham. He has been subject to controversy, having been faced with ethics complaints and having only won election to the House during the 2018 Midterms by a margin of less than one percent.
Rep. Watkins lost renomination efforts to Jake LaTurner, who got just under 50% of the vote.[199]
The Democrat primary was won by Michelle De La Isla with 75% of the votes casted.[199]
LaTurner handily won the election by a fifteen-point margin to succeed Watkins.[200]
Incumbent Democrat Sharice Davids sought reelection. Davids voted for the House Democrats' impeachment sham.
Davids received the backing of the globalist Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Rep. Davids ran unopposed in the Democrat primary.[199]
Amanda Adkins won the Republican primary in a strongly contested race, garnering a plurality of just 31% of the vote.[199]
Representing an increasingly liberal district in an urban area, Davids handily won re-election by by almost a ten-point margin.[200] The seat was previously held by Koch puppet Kevin Yoder, who lost re-election to Davids in the 2018 Midterms.
Democrat John Yarmuth ran for re-election. Rep. Yarmuth is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the sham impeachment resolutions. A bigot, he has called for banning teenagers from wearing MAGA hats following liberal smears surrounding the Covington Catholic kids, a remark he later insisted was merely a joke.[201]
Yarmuth faced no primary challengers in his renomination.[202]
The Republican primary was won by Rhonda Palazzo with a plurality of 42.4% of the votes casted.[202]
Representing a very liberal district containing Louisville, where far-left riots have occurred, Yarmuth easily won re-election to another House term by over twenty points.[203]
Anti-establishment Republican representative Thomas Massie ran for re-election. Massie voted against the impeachment sham. A libertarian similar to Sen. Rand Paul as well as a fiscal conservative, he faced wrath from both Democrats and Republicans including President Trump, who called for him to be tossed out of the Republican Party[204] for single-handedly blocking an extremely expensive coronavirus stimulus bill.[205]
Rep. Massie faced a primary challenge from Todd McMurty, who was backed by some members of the GOP establishment, including neocon Liz Cheney. Cheney later rescinded her support for McMurty and requested that donations she gave to him be returned after racist tweets of his surfaced.[206] Massie was ultimately renominated with 81% of the vote.[202]
The Democrat primary was won by Alexandra Owensby with 58% of the votes casted.[202]
Massie easily won re-election.[203]
Republican representative Andy Barr ran for re-election. Barr voted against the sham impeachment resolutions. He previously was re-elected in the 2018 Midterms in a surprise upset after facing a heavily-backed challenge from Democrat Amy McGrath, who was considered likely to unseat Barr. McGrath, who lost a race she was favored in, decided to run for Senate in 2020 against Sen. Mitch McConnell, only to lose again.
In late October 2020, Barr faced a misleading attack ad by VoteVets.org, which featured a Kentucky man accusing him of being tied to Big Pharma and blamed him for a rise in insurance costs; however, the person in the advertisement works in the state government and is insured through the state's health care plans, thus meaning that it is not a national issue Barr is responsible for.[207]
Barr was renominated with just over 90% of the votes casted.[202]
The Democrat primary was won by Josh Hicks with 72% of the vote.[202]
Barr handily won re-election to another House term by over fifteen points.[203]
Under Louisiana election, no primaries were held for each party prior to the general elections; instead, all candidates in each election competed in a jungle primary on November 3, 2020; such that no candidate receives a majority of the vote, the top two go to a runoff to determine who will serve in the 117th Congress.
Establishment conservative Republican Steve Scalise, the House Minority Whip, ran for re-election to another House term. Scalise voted against the sham articles of impeachment.
Scalise easily won re-election with over 70% of the vote.[208]
Democrat Cedric Richmond ran for re-election. Richmond voted in favor of the impeachment coup.
Representing a very liberal district, Richmond was handily re-elected.[208]
Republican representative Clay Higgins sought re-election. Higgins voted against the sham articles of impeachment. An anti-establishment conservative and former law enforcement officer, Higgins is known for his boldness, and has called for retaliation against far-left rioters amidst the 2020 Leftwing insurrection.[209] He has received a 92% score from the Heritage Foundation for the 116th Congress.[210]
Higgins easily won re-election, garnering two-thirds of the votes cast.[208]
Republican Rep. Mike Johnson ran for re-election. Johnson voted against the sham articles of impeachment.
Johnson easily won the jungle primary with 60% of the vote.[208]
Rep. Ralph Abraham, R-Alto; did not run for re-election.
Nine candidates have qualified for the jungle primary to be held on November 3, 2020. They included: Sandra "Candy" Christophe (D-Alexandria); Allen Guillory Sr. (R-Opelousas); State Representative Lance Harris (R-Alexandria); "Matt" Hasty (R-Pineville); Jesse P. Lagarde (D-Amite); Martin Lemelle Jr., Former Ralph Abraham Chief of Staff Luke Letlow (R-Start); Ouachita Parish Police Juror "Scotty" Robinson (R-Monroe); D-Ruston; Phillip Snowden (D-Monroe). Letlow finished first place at 33%, with Harris at 17%.[208] The two faced each other in a runoff.
Letlow won the runoff to succeed Rep. Abraham.[211]
Republican representative Garret Graves ran for re-election. Graves voted against the impeachment coup.
Graves easily won re-election.[208]
Freshman incumbent Jared Golden ran for reelection. Golden is a member of the far-left Congressional Progressive Caucus[Citation Needed] and voted for one of the two impeachment sham "resolutions" against President Trump. Golden is a member of the Gang of Nine,[82] a group of liberal Democrats in the 116th Congress who consider themselves "moderate" despite being as liberal as most Democrats.
Golden ran unopposed in his party's primary election.[212]
The moderately contested Republican primary was won by Dale Crafts with 44.7% of the votes cast.[212]
Golden won re-election by seven points.[213]
Andy Harris, the Republican representative from Maryland representing the 1st congressional district, ran for re-election. Rep. Harris voted against the impeachment sham. He is the only member of the Republican Party among the state's congressional delegation due to extreme gerrymandering in the state that has divided the districts into bizarre shapes.
Rep. Harris was renominated with just over 80% of the vote.[214]
The Democrat primary was won by Mia Mason with a plurality of 41.5% of the vote.[214]
Harris easily won re-election by over twenty points.[215]
Democrat Steny Hoyer, the current House Majority Leader, ran for re-election. Hoyer voted in favor of the sham impeachment resolutions.
Hoyer was renominated with just over 70% of the vote.[214]
The Republican primary was won by Chris Palombi with a plurality of 36% of the vote.[214]
Hoyer easily won re-election over Palombi.[215]
Democrat Kweisi Mfume ran for re-election to a full House term. Rep. Mfume voted in favor of the impeachment sham. He was elected in a special election in late 2019 to succeed Elijah Cummings, who died on October 17, 2019.
Mfume was renominated with 76% of the votes casted in the Democrat primary.[214]
The Republican primary was won by Kimberly Klacik with 70% of the vote.[214] A rising Republican star, Klacik became viral after releasing a campaign ad effectively condemning the Democratic Party over the lack of progress for many black Americans in extremely liberal inner cities like Baltimore,[216] which experiences among the nation's highest crime rates. She later spoke at the 2020 RNC,[217] which the racist MSNBC refused to air for its viewers.[218]
Mfume easily won the general election, representing an extremely liberal district.[215]
Democrat Jamie Raskin ran for re-election. Raskin is a member of the CPC and voted in favor of the impeachment coup. A leftist, he has voiced opposition to gambling in a congressional hearing yet took tens of thousands of dollars in donations from lobbyists associated with online gambling.[219] His wife Sarah Bloom, an Obama administration official, is noted for having unmasked Michael T. Flynn.[220]
Rep. Raskin was renominated with 85% of the vote.[214]
The Republican primary was won by Gregory Coll with 41.5% of the votes casted.[214]
Raskin easily won re-election.[215]
Democrat James McGovern ran for re-election. McGovern is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the impeachment coup. He is considered one of the most liberal members of Congress.[221]
McGovern won renomination with no primary challengers.[222]
The Republican primary was won by Tracy Lovvorn, who ran unopposed.[222]
McGovern easily won re-election to another House term.[223]
Democrat Joe Kennedy III retired, having made an unsuccessful bid for U.S. Senate to challenge incumbent progressive Democrat Ed Markey. Likely having made the decision out of pride in assuming that his family ties would propel him to victory, Kennedy couldn't manage to specifically explain why he ran to unseat Markey.[224]
The heavily contested Democrat primary was won by Jake Auchlincloss with a plurality of 22% of the votes cast.[222]
The Republican primary was won by candidate Julia Hall with 63% of the vote.[222]
Auchincloss handily won the open seat to succeed Kennedy.[223]
Democrat Katherine Clark ran for re-election. Clark is a member and vice chair[225] of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment coup against Donald Trump. She is currently running for assistant House speaker.[226]
Clark won renomination with no primary challengers.[222]
Caroline Colarusso won the Republican primary unopposed.[222]
Clark easily won re-election, representing a very liberal district.[223]
Democrat Seth Moulton is seeking re-election. Moulton voted for the impeachment sham.
Moulton won his party's primary with 78% of the vote.[222]
The Republican primary was won by Jake Paul Moran, who ran uncontested.[222]
Far-left Democrat representative Ayanna Pressley ran for re-election. Pressley is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment coup. A member of the Squad, she is a liberal hypocrite who boycotted Donald Trump's 2020 State of the Union address because of his supposed "contempt for our Constitution",[227] then flip-flopped no more than two weeks later in calling the Constitution "sexist by its very design".[228] Pressley revealed in early 2020 a diagnosis of alopecia (baldness)[229] and prioritized making hair discrimination illegal because it is somehow tied with racism.[230]
Pressley won renomination with no primary challengers.[222] No Republican filed to run for the seat.
Facing only an independent challenger, Pressley easily won re-election.[223]
Justin Amash, the anti-Trump representative from Michigan's 3rd district who voted to impeach the president, retired.[231] This announcement came in mid-July 2020 after he initially considered a run for president as a Libertarian[232] but ultimately decided against such.[233]
In a strongly contested Republican primary election, Peter Meijer won with a bare majority of 50.2% of the votes cast.[234] He is a member of the Meijer family that owns the popular chain of Meijer stores in the Midwest, especially in Michigan.
The only Democrat who ran for the open seat was Hillary Scholten, who won her party's primary election uncontested.[234] Being dependent on backing from out-of-state political operatives and Hollywood liberals,[235] she previously claimed to be running a "grassroots campaign".[236] Scholten has also faced a cease and desist from a homeless shelter for misusing an image of theirs' in a campaign ad.[237]
Meijer won the general election by a six-point margin to succeed Amash.[238]
Establishment anti-Trump RINO Fred Upton ran for re-election to an 18th term in office.[239] While strongly critical of the president, Upton voted against the impeachment coup. He faced a strong challenge from the progressive-backed Jon Hoadley, who previously ran a blog using misogynistic language and bragging about drug usage.[240] Unsurprisingly, he has received the endorsements of Joe Biden[241] and the Democrat establishment.[242]
Upton was renominated with just over 60% of the votes cast over primary challenger Elena Oelke.[234] While he won a majority of the vote, it was a considerably smaller margin compared to many other incumbent Republican representatives, as he was a moderate Republican compared to Oelke, who ran on a much more conservative platform.[243]
Hoadley won the Democrat primary with 50% of the vote to face off against Upton in the general election.[234]
Despite polling that suggested a close race, Upton managed to retain his seat over the disgraced Hoadley by a sixteen-point margin.[238]
Former CIA agent and Democrat partisan Elissa Slotkin ran for re-election.[244] Running for a second term in a normally Republican district despite having voted to impeach Donald Trump,[245] she is a member of the Gang of Nine, a group of left-wing Democrats in the 116th Congress with national security and/or military backgrounds who described themselves as "moderate".[82]
On July 10, 2020, Rep. Slotkin warned that much of the fake "polling" during the 2020 election season are misleading, noting mistakes that led to large inaccuracies present in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.[246] This was later proven correct, as Republicans generally out-performed expectations set by the majority of polls in the 2020 general elections.
Rep. Slotkin was renominated with no primary challengers.[234]
Among the Republicans who ran to challenge Slotkin included former Michigan Board of Education member Nikki Snyder.[245] However, she failed to gather sufficient signatures and was disqualified from the ballot.[247] The primary was ultimately won by Paul Junge with a plurality of 35% of the vote in a strongly contested race.[234]
Despite Republican efforts to flip the seat, Slotkin managed to win by just under four points.[238]
Establishment Republican representative Paul Mitchell retired.
The Republican primary was won by Lisa McClain with a plurality of 42% of the votes cast.[234]
Kimberly Bizon won the Democrat primary with 54% of the vote.[234]
McClain easily won the general election by over thirty points to succeed Mitchell.[238]
(lost) |
(won) |
Democrat representative Haley Stevens ran for re-election. Stevens voted in favor of the impeachment sham. Having been noted her public meltdowns, she screamed at a town hall that the NRA "has got to go!"[248] In March 2020 amidst the coronavirus pandemic, Stevens ranted on the House floor in an incoherent string of gibberish, yelling as she was told that she had exceeded her allotted time to speak.[249] Her campaign then attempted to fundraise off the meltdown, which elicited a complaint from a watchdog group for violating House rules.[250]
Stevens was being backed by the globalist Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Rep. Stevens was renominated with no primary challengers.
Among the Republicans who sought to unseat Stevens included former U.S. representative Kerry Bentivolio and automotive specialist Whittney Williams.[251][252] The primary was ultimately won by Eric Esshaki with a plurality of 31% of the votes cast.[234]
Representing an increasingly liberal district, Steven managed to hold on to her seat, but only by less than three points.[238]
"Progressive" Squad member Rashida Tlaib ran for re-election.[253] Tlaib is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, a supporter of the radical Green New Deal and Medicare for All programs, and is also a member of Democratic Socialists of America. She voted in favor of the impeachment coup against President Trump.
Tlaib's own father has stated that the representative "lied big time" to get into office.[254]
Rep. Tlaib expressed outrage on Twitter after Donald Trump was acquitted by The Senate.[255]
Tlaib retweeted[256] a smear originally tweeted by the gun control activist David Hogg, who said "F*** a National day of prayer".[257]
Detroit City Council President Brenda Jones ran to challenge Rashida Tlaib. Jones won the Special Election in 2018 to finish the term of John Conyers and lost the 2018 primary to Tlaib in a 6-way contest by fewer than 1,000 votes. Unlike Tlaib, Jones is considered a sane Democrat.[258] However, Tlaib managed to win with just under two-thirds of the votes cast.[234]
David Dudenhoefer won the Republican primary with just under half of the votes cast to challenge Rep. Tlaib.[234]
Despite strong efforts to unseat Tlaib due to her vile bigotry, she managed to retain her seat by a landslide due to the district being extremely liberal.[238]
Democrat Brenda Lawrence ran for re-election. Lawrence is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment coup after flip-flopping in a bout of Romnesia in late November 2019, noting at one point that she "doesn't see the value of kicking him out of office",[259] though quickly reverting back to her original stance of supporting impeachment.[260]
Lawrence was easily renominated in her party's primary with over 90% of the vote.[234]
The Republican primary was won by Robert Patrick with 65% of the votes cast.[234]
Representing a highly liberal district including the Detroit area, Lawrence easily won re-election.[238]
Republican representative Jim Hagedorn ran for re-election. Rep. Hagedorn voted against the impeachment sham. He was elected in the 2018 Midterms in a very tight race to succeed retiring Democrat Tim Walz, winning by a 0.4% margin over opponent Dan Feehan despite other Republican candidates losing in similarly close elections.[261] The district was carried by Donald Trump in the 2016 U.S. presidential election by fifteen percentage points,[262] and RCP considered the race to lean in Hagedorn's favor.[263]
It was announced in early October 2020 that a scheduled debate for the general election was cancelled largely due to the effects of the CCP pandemic.[264]
Hagedorn was renominated with no primary challengers.[265]
The Democrat primary was won by Feehan, who ran unopposed to seek a rematch against Hagedorn.[265]
Hagedorn held on to his seat for another House term by three percentage points over Feehan in the rematch.[266]
Democrat Angie Craig ran for reelection. Craig is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham resolution against President Trump.
Craig received the endorsement of the globalist Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Craig was renominated with no primary challengers.[265]
The Republican primary was won by Tyler Kistner, who ran uncontested.[265]
Representing a traditionally Republican district that has become somewhat more Democrat-favoring in recent years, Craig won re-election by two points over Kistner.[266]
Democrat Dean Phillips ran for re-election to another term in the U.S. House of Representatives. Phillips voted in favor of the impeachment coup. He was elected in the 2018 Midterms, defeating Republican then-incumbent Erik Paulsen due to the district becoming increasingly liberal as well as Paulsen's inability to appeal to anti-Trumpers despite opposing Trump during the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
Phillips was backed by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Rep. Phillips was easily renominated with 91% of the votes cast in the Democrat primary election.[265]
The Republican primary was won by Kendall Qualls with 76% of the vote.[265]
Phillips won re-election by over ten points.[266]
Betty McCollum, the Democrat representative from Minnesota's 4th district, ran for re-election to an eleventh House term. McCollum voted in favor of the sham articles of impeachment brought against President Trump. Her seat was marked as a safe hold, representing a very liberal, Democrat-favoring area that has not elected a Republican to the House since 1947.
Known by some as "BDS Betty",[267] McCollum has been noted for her consistent anti-Zionist advocacy. She had voted against an AIPAC-favored, anti-Hamas bill in 2006,[268] and introduced legislation in 2017 to withhold military aid to Israel,[269] which she claimed runs on a system of 'apartheid'.[270] Rep. McCollum voted against an anti-BDS bill in July 2019,[271] and joined Ilhan Omar as well as Rashida Tlaib at an anti-Semitic conference in late 2020.[272]
Rep. McCollum was renominated with 84% of the vote.[265]
The Republican primary was won by Gene Rechtzigel with 51% of the vote.[265]
McCollum easily won re-election by a very wide margin.[266]
Progressive Squad member Ilhan Omar ran for reelection. Omar is a member of the CPC, the Democratic Socialists of America, and voted in favor of the impeachment coup. She presently is under investigation for immigration fraud and campaign ethics violations. Omar is a staunch advocate of lawlessness and defunding the police.[273] A 17 year-old campaign staffer for Lacy Johnson, her Republican opponent, was shot and killed outside a gas station in Minneapolis.[274]
A Democrat challenger who ran against Omar in her party's primary election received the endorsement of Minnesota's largest newspaper.[275]
Omar was renominated with just under 60% of the vote.[265]
The Republican primary was won by Lacy Johnson with 77% of the votes cast.[265]
Despite strong efforts to unseat Omar, she won by around forty points in the general election, representing an extremely liberal district.[265]
(won) |
(lost) |
Rep. Collin Peterson, the moderately conservative Democrat from Minnesota's 7th congressional district, ran for another House term. Along with then-Democrat Jeff Van Drew, Peterson voted against both sham articles of impeachment brought against President Trump. He faced re-election in a district Trump won over Hillary Clinton in the 2016 U.S. presidential election by a 30-point margin.[276]
Rep. Peterson was renominated with over 70% of the vote.[265]
The Republican primary was won by Michelle Fischbach with nearly 60% of the vote.[265] Fischbach has received the endorsements of President Trump[277] and former U.S. representative Michele Bachmann.[278]
While Peterson garnered much more crossover appeal in his previous re-election bids, he lost the general election to Fischbach by a thirteen-point margin.[265]
Republican Pete Stauber ran for re-election. Stauber voted against the impeachment coup.
Stauber easily won his party's primary with over 90% of the vote.[265]
The Democrat primary was won by Quinn Nystrom, who ran unopposed.[265]
Rep. Stauber handily won re-election to another House term.[265]
Left-wing Democrat Bennie Thompson ran for re-election. Thompson is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the sham impeachment resolution against President Trump.
Rep. Thompson was re-nominated in the primary, winning 94% of the vote.[279]
No Republican candidate won a majority in the primary, with Brian Flowers garnering a plurality of 37.9%, thus defaulting a runoff election.[279]
Thompson defeated Flowers in the general election by over thirty points in the highly liberal district.[280]
Democrat Lacy Clay ran for re-election. Clay voted in favor of the impeachment coup.
Rep. Clay was narrowly defeated in his primary election in a three-point margin by challenger Cori Bush,[282] a left-wing BLM activist.[283] Bush was the Marxist liberal activist leading the mob outside the home of Patricia and Mark McCloskey with a bullhorn screaming, "You can't stop the revolution!" Weeks later Bush won the Democrat primary nomination for the 1st district of Missouri, effectively being guaranteed a win to serve in the 117th Congress. According to The Federalist, Bush will be a 5th member of the The Squad.[284] St. Louis prosecutor Kim Gardner indicted McCloskey's for exercising their 2nd Amendment rights on their own property when they were assaulted and threatened by the Black Lives Matter activists.[285][286]
Bush believes that the Pentagon should be defunded so that the money can go to social services.[287]
The Republican primary was won by Anthony Rogers with 62% of the vote.[282]
Despite being extremely far-left, Bush easily won the general election.[288]
Republican representative Ann Wagner ran for re-election. Wagner voted against the sham impeachment articles.
Rep. Wagner was renominated with no primary challengers.[282]
The Democrat primary was won by Jill Schupp, who ran unopposed.[282]
While the mostly suburban, affluent district has become less Republican than it used to, with some expecting a potential upset, Wagner managed to retain her House seat, beating Schupp by six points.[288]
Democrat Emanuel Cleaver ran for re-election. Cleaver voted in favor of the impeachment sham resolutions.
Cleaver easily won renomination with over 80% of the vote.[282]
The Republican primary was won by Ryan Derks with a plurality of 35% of the vote.[282]
Representing a liberal area, Cleaver handily held his House seat, defeating Derks by twenty points with just under 60% of the vote.[288]
Greg Gianforte, the incumbent Republican representative from Montana's at-large district, did not run for re-election, and instead ran for governor.[289]
In a strongly contested Republican primary election, Montana state auditor Matt Rosendale won with a plurality of 48% of the votes cast.[290] Rosendale previously run unsuccessfully for U.S. Senate against incumbent Democrat officeholder Jon Tester in the 2018 Midterms.[291]
The Democrat primary was won by Kathleen Williams with just under 90% of the votes cast.[290]
Despite polling that suggested a tossup in a mostly Republican state, Rosendale handily won the general election with 56% of the vote by a thirteen-point margin over Williams to succeed Gianforte.[292]
Republican Don Bacon ran for re-election. He voted against the sham articles of impeachment. A Moderate Republican, Bacon has broke with Donald Trump at times, including over renaming Confederate statues. He joined Democrat Anthony Brown during June 2020 in pushing for such out of political correctness,[293] even insinuating that not doing so would make Republicans the party of Jim Crow.[294]
Representing a mostly urban/suburban area that includes the entirety of liberal-leaning Douglas County, Bacon faced a tough re-election fight.
Bacon was easily renominated with 91% of the vote.[295]
Kara Eastman, a noted progressive,[296][297] won the Democrat primary with 62% of the vote.[295] However, in being very left-wing, she failed to garner the support of Bacon's former rival and Democrat predecessor Brad Ashford, who endorsed the representative as well as Joe Biden in calling for bipartisan "solutions" and noting Bacon's globalist record which included voting in favor of illegal aliens.[298]
While polling suggested a tossup and a potential upset in favor of the Democrats, Bacon defeated Eastman by around four points for a third House term.[299]
Democrat Dina Titus ran for re-election. Titus voted in favor of the sham articles of impeachment brought against President Trump, having publicly made an unhinged statement a month prior in calling to "impeach the bastard".[300] She is an alleged supporter of the MeToo movement who dismissed out of hand credible rape allegations against Joe Biden.[301]
Rep. Titus won renomination with 83% of the votes cast.[302]
The Republican primary was won by Joyce Bentley with a plurality of 36% of the vote.[302]
Representing a very liberal district covering most of Las Vegas (sometimes referred to as Sin City for its promotion of Hollywood values), TItus handily won re-election by almost thirty points.[303]
Republican representative Mark Amodei is seeking re-election. Amodei voted against the sham articles of impeachment despite the lamestream media previously insisting falsely[304] that he supported the Democrat impeachment coup.
Amodei was renominated in his party's primary with 81% of the vote.[302]
The Democrat primary was won by Patricia Ackerman with just under half of the votes cast.[302]
Representing the mostly conservative northern part of the state that includes the city of Reno, Amodei won re-election by sixteen points.[303]
Democrat Susie Lee ran for re-election. Rep. Lee voted in favor of the impeachment coup. A flip-flopper, she said that "believing a survivor of sexual assault should not be a partisan issue" amidst the Kavanaugh smear yet stood by Joe Biden when Tara Reade made credible and corroborated allegations of sexual assault against him.[305] Lee also faced an ethics complaint in mid-June 2020 for pushing a modification to the Paycheck Protection Program that would benefit her husband's company in a conflict of interest.[306]
Lee was backed by the globalist Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Lee was easily renominated with over 80% of the vote.[302]
While her seat was considered mostly safe, Lee only won re-election by three percentage points.[303]
Democrat Steven Horsford sought reelection. Horsford is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham.
Horsford previously represented the district from 2013 to 2015, having been defeated for re-election by Republican Cresent Hardy in the 2014 Midterms. Hardy lost re-election in 2016 to Ruben Kihuen, who retired in 2018. Horsford faced Hardy in a rematch, and won during a blue wave.
Rep. Horsford won his party's primary election with three-quarters of the vote.[302]
The Republican primary was won by Jim Marchant with a plurality of 34.5% of the vote.[302]
Horsford won re-election by five points over Marchant.[303]
(lost) |
(won) |
Incumbent Democrat Chris Pappas ran for reelection. Pappas voted for the House Democrats' impeachment sham against President Trump. He faced a strong challenge from Republican Matt Mowers, who received the endorsement of Donald Trump.[307] While increasingly unreliable election ratings considered the seat to most likely be retained,[6] a poll in late October 2020 found Mowers in the lead by two points;[308] this was attributed to the incumbent Democrat's relationship with a lobbyist[309] that Mowers brought up at a debate.
Pappas won renomination with no challengers.[310]
The Republican primary was won by Mowers with nearly 60% of the votes cast.[311]
While some anticipated a very close race, Pappas won re-election by five percentage points.[312]
Democrat representative Ann Kuster ran for re-election. Rep. Kuster voted in favor of the impeachment coup.
Kuster easily won renomination with over 90% of the vote.[313]
The Republican primary was won by Steve Negron with just under half of the votes cast.[314]
Kuster won re-election over Negron by ten percentages points.[312]
Former Democrat Jeff Van Drew ran for re-election. Switching to the Republican Party after voting against both sham articles of impeachment, Van Drew received President Trump's endorsement to help boost re-election efforts.[315] He has noted that the Democratic Party "used to be more moderate".[316]
Van Drew faced a strong challenge from Democrat Amy Kennedy, who is married to Patrick J. Kennedy, the second son of Ted Kennedy. Kennedy reportedly had supported Van Drew's 2018 run.[317] She owns thousands of stock in Chinese investments and opposed President Trump's agenda of enacting tough policies against the communist regime.[318] Kennedy was considered to be her family dynasty's last hope of maintaining political power after the defeat of her cousin-in-law Joe Kennedy III in a Senate primary.[319] She has claimed that opposing defunding the police means not going far enough to address racism.[320]
Rep. Van Drew won the Republican primary election with 82% of the vote[321] over challenger Bob Patterson, who ran to the right of him.[322][323]
The Democrat primary was won by Kennedy with 62% of the votes cast.[321]
Despite fake polling consistently showing Van Drew trailing Kennedy which received strong coverage by media outlets including The Hill,[324][325][326][327][328] he won the general election to a second House term as a Republican by a six-point margin in the conservative-leaning district.[329]
Democrat Andy Kim sought re-election. Kim is member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham. He was criticized in January 2020 by GOP challenger Kate Gibbs for pulling a "bait and switch" when campaigning for Congress in 2018.[330] According to David Richter, another Republican opponent, Kim's re-election efforts are being boosted[331] by Courier Newsroom,[332] which was reported by the Washington Free Beacon to be a liberal fake news site.[333]
Kim is backed by the globalist Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Rep. Kim was renominated with no primary challengers.[321]
The Republican primary was won by Richter with over 60% of the vote.[321] Despite claiming to support Trump, he has criticized the president and previously donated to Democrats.[334]
Kim won re-election by eight points.[329]
Republican Chris Smith ran for re-election. Smith voted against the impeachment coup.
Smith was easily renominated with over 90% of the vote.[321]
The Democrat primary was won by Stephanie Schmid with just under 70% of the vote.[321]
Representing New Jersey's most conservative congressional district, Smith easily won re-election by a twenty-percentage point margin.[329]
Democrat Josh Gottheimer ran for re-election. Rep. Gottheimer voted for the sham impeachment articles.
Gottheimer won renomination with 70% of the vote.[321]
Frank Pallotta won the Republican primary election with 53% of the vote.[321]
Gottheimer won re-election by eight points over Pallotta.[329]
Democrat representative Tom Malinowski ran for re-election. Malinowski voted in favor of the impeachment coup against Donald Trump. Despite supporting the sham impeachment over supposed charges of corruption and quid pro quo, he himself suggested withholding transportation of Lysol to Kentucky amidst the CCP pandemic to force Sen. Mitch McConnell to pass partisan Democrat legislation.[335] He is known for having introduced legislation to condemn QAnon, a group that calls out pedophiles.[336] Unsurprisingly, he once lobbied against the creation of a child sex offender registry over concerns that such a system would be too harsh for predators.[337]
Rep. Malinowski was renominated with no primary challengers.[321]
The Republican primary was won by Thomas Kean, Jr. with just under 80% of the votes cast.[321] He is a member of the state Senate, representing the 21st district and currently serving as the Minority Leader.
Despite his past record that would be a disqualifying factor, Malinowski won re-election very narrowly, defeating Kean by 1.2% of the vote.[329]
Democrat Mikie Sherrill ran for re-election. Rep. Sherrill voted in favor of the sham articles of impeachment brought against Donald Trump. She is a member of the Gang of Nine, a group of liberal Democrats with military/national security experience who consider themselves "moderate".[82]
Sherrill was renominated with no primary challengers.[321]
The Republican primary was won by Rosemary Becchi, who ran unopposed.[321]
Sherrill won re-election by seven percentage points.[329]
The primary elections were set on June 2, 2020.
Deb Haaland, the freshman Democrat representative from New Mexico's 1st district, ran for re-election.[338] Haaland's voting record makes her claims of 30 years sobriety questionable.[339] She is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the impeachment sham.
Haaland easily won her party's primary election uncontested.[340]
The Republican primary was won by Michelle Garcia Holmes with just under half of the votes cast.[340]
Representing a very liberal district covering most of Albuquerque, Haaland won re-election with 58% of the vote.[341]
(won) |
(lost) |
Freshmen incumbent Rep. Xochitl Torres Small faced a tough re-election bid in what promised to be one the most expensive races in the country with money pouring in from out of state on both sides in a traditional heavily Republican district in New Mexico's oil country. The Border Wall on the district's southern edge, gun control legislation, delivery of healthcare services in rural areas, illegal immigration, human trafficking, and illegal narcotics trafficking all combine as issues of uppermost concern to voters.
Rep. Torres Small received the endorsement of the Chamber of Commerce.[33]
A so-called "moderate", Torres Small supports late-term abortion.[342]
Torres Small has flip-flopped on fracking, distancing herself from Joe Biden after his contradictory statements despite having previously been an anti-oil activist when supporting Tom Udall.[343]
Rep. Torres Small won her party's primary uncontested.[340]
A former staffer of Rep. Steven Schiff, who represented the district for 20 years up until 2018, Claire Chase, was well funded and faced state Rep. Yvette Herrell, who lost to Torres Small in the 2018 general election and carries some baggage from earlier corruption scandals as well as for spreading a false rumor about Chase.[344] Throughout the campaigns, both sides targeted each other with attack ads,[345] and Chase claimed that Herrell was a weak candidate after liberal super PACs meddled in the primary by boosting the latter.[346] Herrell ultimately won with a plurality of 45% of the votes cast.[340]
Herrell won the general election, defeating Torres Small by seven percentage points.[341]
Democrat Ben Ray Luján vacated to run for the seat of retiring Sen. Tom Udall.
Teresa Leger Fernandez defeated Deep State darling and notorious anti-Semite Valerie Plame with 42.8% of the vote, nearly doubling Plame's 24.8%.[340] Legar Fernandez received endorsements from Planned Parenthood and NARAL Pro-Choice America.[347]
4 Republicans have expressed interest in running to represent a district that usually leans Democratic. The primary was won by Alexis Johnson with a plurality of 37% of the vote.[340]
Leger Fernandez won the general election to succeed Lujan with nearly 60% of the vote.[341]
The primary election were originally scheduled for April 28, 2020, but got rescheduled to June 23 due to the CCP pandemic.
Republican representative Lee Zeldin ran for re-election. Among the strongest defenders of President Trump amidst the impeachment coup,[348][349] Zeldin spoke over five hundred times by early November 2019 regarding the sham articles.[350] He voted against the impeachment resolutions, and earned the nickname "The Legend of Zeldin".[351] This is in comparison to an anti-Trump Democrat initially challenging him who questioned in mid-May 2020 whether securing funding for personal protective equipment amidst the CCP pandemic would be "worth" working with the president.[352] Another Democrat challenger, Nancy Goroff, is anti-police and has refused to condemn far-left violence.[353] Goroff has also failed to report millions in personal financial holdings,[354] and has been rebuked by a university dean for misusing school resources to bolster her campaign.[355]
Zeldin easily won his primary election uncontested.[356]
The Democrat primary was won by Goroff with a plurality of 36% of the vote.[356]
Despite fake polling that suggested a very close race, Zeldin handily won re-election in the mostly conservative district by a ten-point margin.[357]
Republican Peter T. King retired.
The Republican primary was won by Andrew Garbarino with 64% of the vote.[356]
Jackie Golden won the Democrat primary with 73% of the votes cast.[356] Despite being a combat veteran who touts her record as a military police officer,[358] Gordon has appealed to far-leftists who seek to defund the police.[359]
Despite many who anticipated a very close race and a possible flip for the Democrats, Garbarino won the general election by seven points to succeed Rep. King in the conservative-leaning district.[357]
Democrat Thomas Suozzi ran for re-election. Suozzi voted in favor of the impeachment coup.
Suozzi won his party's primary with over 60% of the vote.[356]
The Republican primary was won by George Santos, who ran uncontested.[356]
Despite the race being considered mostly a safe hold for Suozzi, he initially trailed Santos for several days as votes were being counted since Election Night. NBC News, which showed its bias in refusing to declare other races that were statistically impossible for Democrats to win, quickly declared Suozzi the winner once he took a lead over Santos.[360] With 100% of the vote now being reported, the representative defeated Santos with 56% of the votes cast.
Democrat Grace Meng sought re-election. Meng is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus voted in favor of the sham impeachment resolutions. A politically correct leftist, among her priorities amidst the coronavirus pandemic was condemning the use of the term "Chinese virus" as being "racist".[361]
Meng won renomination in the Democrat primary with over 60% of the vote.[356]
The Republican primary was won by Thomas Zmich, who ran unopposed.[356]
Meng easily won re-election, representing a very liberal district.[357]
Democrat Nydia Velázquez ran for re-election to another House term. Velázquez is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus voted in favor of the impeachment coup.
Rep. Velázquez was renominated with 80% of the vote.[356]
The Republican primary was won by Brian Kelly, who ran uncontested.[356]
Velazquez won re-election with over 80% of the votes cast.[357]
Democrat Hakeem Jeffries ran for re-election. Jeffries is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus voted for the sham articles of impeachment.
Jeffries ran unopposed in his party's primary.[356]
Garfield Wallace won the Republican primary uncontested.[356]
Jeffries handily won re-election in a landslide, representing an extremely liberal district.[357]
Incumbent far-left Democrat Yvette Clarke faced challenges from multiple Democrats. Clarke is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus voted for the impeachment sham resolutions. She has also been accused of darkening the skin of primary challenger Adem Bunkeddeko in a mailing. "As Democrats, we are supposed to be the party of equality, truth, and facts. But instead, Ms. Clarke puts out a racist mailer that clearly darkens my skin. This is despicable. She needs to apologize to me and every single one of her constituents."[362]
Clark managed to win renomination with only 54% of the votes cast.[356]
The Republican primary was won by Constantine Jean-Pierre, who ran uncontested.[356]
Clark won re-election with 80% of the vote.[357]
Incumbent Democrat Jerry Nadler ran for re-election. Nadler is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus voted for the impeachment sham. A far-leftist, Nadler has ridiculously referred to Antifa violence as a "myth".[363]
Nadler was renominated with two-third of the votes cast.[356]
The Republican primary was won by Cathy Bernstein, who ran unopposed.[356]
Despite being an unhinged leftist with acute TDS, Nadler won re-election by nearly a forty-point margin.[357]
(won) |
(lost) |
Democrat Max Rose, a member of the Gang of Nine,[82] sought re-election. A flip-flopper, Rose stated his opposition to the impeachment coup on September 12, 2019,[364] though later supported the sham articles,[365] even asserting at one point that Trump must somehow "prove" his innocence.[366] He ultimately voted for the impeachment sham resolutions.
Rose has been a strong critic of Bill de Blowhard, releasing an ad in early September 2020 calling him "the worst mayor in the history of New York City."[367] However, his Republican challenger Nicole Malliotakis has pointed out the similarities in their favored policies.[368]
In a Breitbart exclusive, Malliotakis spoke with the strongly conservative news network in late October 2020, where she noted that Rose is a phony "moderate".[369]
Having a problem with profanity usage, Rose told a constituent in his district: "Sir, I thought you were out of your f***ing mind by the way, so don’t worry."[370]
Rose faced no primary challengers in his renomination.[356]
The Republican primary was won by Malliotakis with just under 70% of the vote.[356]
Malliotakis defeated Rose in the general election by six percentage points.[357]
Democrat Carolyn Maloney ran for re-election. Maloney is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus voted for the sham articles of impeachment.
Facing a strong primary challenge, Maloney only managed to win renomination with a plurality of 43% of the vote.[356]
The Republican primary was won by Carlos Santiago-Cano, who ran unopposed.[356]
Representing a very liberal district covering part of Manhattan, Maloney handily won re-election to another House term.[357]
Extreme leftist firebrand Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, an incumbent freshman, faced a tough primary from a well qualified field of 4 challengers in the heavily liberal and Democratic district.[371] Ocasio-Cortez, regarded by many as an idiot on economics, has claimed that unemployment is low "because people are working 60, 70, 80 hours a week and can barely feed their family", a statement that liberal PolitiFact rated as "Pants on Fire!"[372] She published a list of demands by the Black Lives Matter organization to end the violence.[373][374] BLM protesters murdered an 8 year old black girl in Atlanta, Georgia on July 5, 2020.
AOC has admitted that the impeachment coup against Donald Trump was about "preventing a potentially disastrous outcome".[375]
8 Republicans have initially lined up to compete for a seat that until very recently had been written off as a Democrat safe seat for decades.[371]
The district has an estimated 5.6% unemployment[376] (9.1% according to Ballotpedia), compared to the U.S. average of 3.5%.[377] The incumbent Ocasio-Cortez chased away 25,000 jobs from Amazon which was considering re-locating in and around the area.[378] Ocasio-Cortez has been widely criticized by Democrats, Republicans, and media as being a driving force behind the Democratic party's disastrous impeachment sham hoax. Although running as a Democrat, Ocasio-Cortez is a member of Democratic Socialists of America and a founding member of the subversive Justice Democrats which have attempted to take over and destroy the traditional Democratic party.
After the confirmation of Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court, Ocasio-Cortez called for court packing.[379]
Ocasio-Cortez ultimately won renomination with 75% of the vote.[356]
The Republican primary was won by John Cummings, who ran uncontested.[356]
Despite being extremely far-left, Ocasio-Cortez won re-election with just under 70% of the vote.[357]
Democrat José Serrano retired.
The Democrat primary was won by Ritchie Torres with a plurality of 32% of the vote.[356] Torres was speculated to become one of the first openly gay Black members of Congress.
The Republican primary was won by Orlando Molina, who ran uncontested.[356]
Torres won the general election with nearly 90% of the vote.[357]
Incumbent Democrat Eliot Engel ran for re-election.
Engel was defeated in the primary. He was caught on a hot mic before a press conference during the George Floyd riots, "If I didn’t have a primary, I wouldn’t care."[380] Engel fell to the communist-aligned Jamaal Bowman.[381] The communist-controlled Justice Democrats PAC dropped $620,000 in support of Bowman.[382] Bowman claims “our political and economic system is genocidal.”[383]
No Republican filed to run for the seat.
Bowman easily won the general election in the highly liberal district.[357]
Democrat Nita Lowey retired.
The Democrat primary was won by Mondaire Jones,[356] who may be among the first openly gay Black members of Congress. Former Obama official and Trump-Russia hoaxer Evelyn Farkas was defeated in the Democrat primary. Farkas either lied on MSNBC alleging that Donald Trump was a Russian agent or lied under oath in closed-door testimony.[384] According to her sworn testimony, she never saw any credible evidence of Trump-Russia collusion. Farkas finished last with 9%.
The Republican primary was won by Maureen McArdle Schulman with nearly 80% of the vote.[356]
Jones won the general election to succeed Lowey with 56% of the vote.[357]
Democrat Sean Patrick Maloney ran for re-election. Maloney voted for the sham articles of impeachment.
Rep. Maloney was renominated with no primary challengers.[356]
Chele Farley won the Republican primary uncontested.[356]
Despite the race being considered a safe hold for Maloney, he only won over Farley in the general election by under five points.[357]
Democrat Antonio Delgado sought reelection. Delgado is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham. He was elected in the 2018 Midterms despite being an anti-Semite and anti-Zionist,[385] and has received the support of a Democrat-funded fake "news" site.[386]
Delgado was endorsed by the Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Delgado won his party's primary election with no challengers.[356]
The Republican primary was won by Kyle Van De Water with nearly 60% of the votes cast.[356]
Delgado won re-election with 52% of the vote.[357]
Republican representative Elise Stefanik ran for re-election. Stefanik voted against the impeachment coup.
Stefanik faced no primary challengers in her renomination.[356]
The Democrat primary was won by Tedra Cobb, who ran uncontested.[356] Cobb has been criticized for ridiculously comparing the usage of the humorous nickname "Taxin' Tedra" by Stefanik to a threatening message the representative received on her car while shopping with her husband in early May 2020.[387] Cobb also attempted to impress veterans by voicing support for legislation already sponsored by Stefanik.[388] She is also noted for having vile supporters who wished death on Donald Trump after the latter had contracted the Wuhan virus.[389]
Cobb has fumbled when asked about her stance on gun control.[390]
Representing a mostly conservative district, Stefanik won re-election by over twenty percentage points.[357]
(results pending) |
(results pending) |
Freshman Democrat Anthony Brindisi ran for re-election. Brindisi voted for the impeachment sham. Despite claiming to stand with police officers,[391] he pushed for ending qualified immunity, a position that would benefit him financially.[392] His Republican opponent Claudia Tenney, who served in the U.S. House of Representatives before being defeated by Brindisi for re-election in the 2018 Midterms amidst a blue wave then, has criticized him for his anti-cop positions,[393] releasing several ads on the matter humorously noting that one "can't spell Brindisi without BS.".[394][395]
Brindisi received an endorsement from the globalist Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Rep. Brindisi won renomination with no primary challengers.[356]
The Republican primary was won by Tenney with just under 60% of the vote.[356]
The race has yet to be called; Tenney initially held a strong lead over Brindisi, which eroded after mail-in/absentee ballots were counted. The former representative criticized the election procedures mandated by fascist Democrat governor Andrew Cuomo, noting possible fraud.[396] (see: 2020 Election fraud timeline) This coincided the emerging of ballots "cast" by dead people in the district, as reported by the New York Post.[397] A judge ruled on November 24 that the race was to be delayed.[398] Brindisi led by a mere thirteen votes just a day later,[399] though Tenney retook a lead, currently by under 300 votes.[400]
Republican John Katko ran for re-election. Katko voted against the impeachment coup. A noted moderate Republican and RINO, he has favored illegal aliens,[401][402][403] pushed for the Equality Act,[404] and voted to remove Civil War-era statues.[405] Unsurprisingly, he has released an ad featuring a Biden-supporting Democrat.[406] While Katko has become more supportive of Donald Trump and endorsed him for the 2020 U.S. presidential election,[407] he insisted that the president is a "knucklehead".[408]
Rep. Katko was renominated with no primary challengers.[356]
The Democrat primary was won by Dana Balter with 63% of the vote.[356] Strongly anti-Trump, Balter had previously organized a left-wing group to protest the killing of Qassem Soleimani.[409] She also earned several thousand dollars in teaching fees from Kazakhstan's authoritarian regime.[410]
At a debate between Katko and Balter, the latter said that she opposes term limits.[411]
Katko won the general election by ten points despite fake polling suggesting a tossup.[357]
Republican Chris Jacobs ran for re-election to a full House term. He won a special election in mid-2020 to serve the remainder of the term of the disgraced Chris Collins,[412] who pleaded guilty to federal charges over insider trading after resigning.[413] Collins is currently facing jail time, but has pleaded to delay the sentence due to the CCP pandemic.[414]
Jacobs won renomination with 60% of the vote.[356]
The Democrat primary was won by Nathan McMurray, who ran unopposed.[356]
Jacobs easily won the general election.[357]
Democrat G.K. Butterfield ran for re-election. Butterfield voted for the sham impeachment resolution.
Conservative, pro-Trump Republican Sandy Smith initially ran for U.S. Senate in the 2020 Senate race to challenge incumbent RINO Thom Tillis,[415] but later decided to run for the House seat to challenge Butterfield instead. She won the primary held on March 3, 2020, garnering 77% of the vote.[416]
While Butterfield won re-election in a very liberal district, he significantly under-performed his previous margins, winning by only an eight-point margin in what was expected to be a safe hold.[417]
Republican George Holding retired,[418] with the reason largely attributed to a redistricting case that moved the seat from representing a Republican stronghold[419] into a highly liberal area.[420]
Deborah Ross won the Democrat primary held on March 3, 2020, garnering 70% of the vote.[416] Ross is a leftist who previously worked for the ACLU, using her position as a lawyer there to argue for providing leniency for a teenager convicted of the brutal rape of a neighbor.[421] She also fought to ban Christmas songs from an elementary school.[422] Having unsuccessfully ran for U.S. Senate in 2016 to challenge RINO Richard Burr, she then held a fundraiser with a lawyer who represented a Taliban terrorist.[423]
Robert Thomas won the Republican primary, garnering a plurality of 48.3% of the vote.[416]
Despite her past record, Ross easily won the general election by nearly a thirty-point margin in the newly drawn district.[417]
Republican representative Mark Walker retired after court-mandated redistricting moved the 6th congressional district of North Carolina from a solidly Republican area[419] into a very liberal section of the state.[420]
Lee Haywood won the Republican primary with over 70% of the vote.[416]
Kathy Manning won the Democrat primary with a plurality of 48.4% of the casted votes.[416]
Similar to the second district, Manning handily won the general election to succeed Walker.[417]
Republican Dan Bishop ran for re-election. Bishop voted against the impeachment coup.
Cynthia Wallace won the Democrat primary held on March 3, 2020, garnering 55.9% of the vote.[416]
Bishop won the general election by an eleven-point margin.[417]
The seat was vacated by Republican Mark Meadows who resigned to assume the position of White House Chief of Staff, where he has been noted for his extreme ineptitude.
Lynda Bennett won the Republican primary with only a plurality of 22.7%, thus triggering a runoff election.[416] The runoff was won by Madison Cawthorn, a young Republican rising star who later spoke at the RNC.[424] He has been subject to left-wing smears[425] and unhinged vandals targeting his home.[426]
Democrat Moe Davis on the primary with a plurality of 47.4%.[416]
Despite fake election ratings and polling suggesting a close race, Cawthorn easily won the general election over the bigoted[427] Davis by over ten points in the strongly Republican district.[417] Following the announcement of his victory, he humorously tweeted: "Cry more, lib."[428]
Democrat Alma Adams ran for re-election. Adams is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the sham impeachment resolution.
Rep. Adams faced a primary challenged Keith Cradle, and easily won with 88.1% of the vote.[416] No Republican filed to run for the seat.
Facing no opponents, Adams won uncontested.[417]
Conservative Republican Kelly Armstrong, the U.S. representative from North Dakota's at-large district, ran for re-election in 2020.[429] Armstrong voted against the impeachment sham resolutions.
Rep. Armstrong won renomination with no primary challengers.[430]
The Democrat primary was won by Zach Raknerud with 62% of the vote.[430]
Armstrong easily won re-election with almost 70% of the vote.[431]
Establishment globalist Republican Steve Chabot ran for re-election. Chabot voted against the impeachment coup.
Rep. Chabot won his party's primary uncontested.[432]
The Democrat primary was won by Kate Schroder with 68% of the vote.[432] Having a case of Romnesia, Schroder has flip-flopped over the Green New Deal.[433]
Despite fake election ratings and polling that suggested a potential flip, Chabot held his seat by a six-point margin.[434]
Anti-establishment Republican Jim Jordan ran for re-election. Jordan voted against the sham articles of impeachment.
Jordan was renominated with no primary challengers.[432]
The Democrat primary was won by Shannon Freshour with a plurality of 47.5% of the vote.[432]
Jordan easily won re-election with nearly 70% of the vote.[434]
Rep. Marcy Kaptur, who was implicated in the Biden-Ukraine scandal, ran for re-election. Kaptur colluded with DNC operative Alexandra Chalupa to push the phony Trump-Russia narrative in early 2016.[435] She voted in favor of the impeachment coup against Donald Trump.
Kaptur was renominated with 91% of the vote.[432]
The Republican primary was won by Rob Weber, who garnered 60% of the vote.[432]
Kaptur won re-election by over twenty points.[434]
Republican representative Mike Turner ran for re-election. Turner against the sham articles of impeachment.
In an interview with Breitbart News Network in late October 2020, Rep. Turner warned of a potential Biden presidency slashing worker pensions.[436]
Turner was easily renominated in the Republican primary with over 80% of the votes cast.[432]
The Democrat primary was won by Desiree Tims with 70% of the vote.[432]
Turner won re-election with 58% of the votes cast.[434]
Democrat Marcia Fudge ran for re-election. Fudge is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the sham impeachment resolutions.
Fudge won renomination with 91% of the votes cast.[432]
The Republican primary was won by Laverne Gore with just under half of the votes cast.[432]
Fudge won the general election easily, representing a very liberal area.[434]
Republican Troy Balderson ran for re-election. Rep. Balderson voted against the impeachment coup.
Balderson won his party's primary election with over 80% of the vote.[432]
The Democrat primary was won by Alaina Shearer with just under 60% of the votes cast.[432]
Balderson won re-election, defeating Shearer by a thirteen-point margin.[434]
Failed presidential candidate Tim Ryan ran for re-election to another House term. Ryan voted in favor of the impeachment coup against Donald Trump.
Rep. Ryan was easily renominated with no primary challengers.[432]
The Republican primary was won by Christina Hagan with 66% of the votes cast.[432]
Rep. Ryan won the general election by an eight-point margin.[434]
Democrat Kendra Horn sought re-election to a second House term. Horn voted for the impeachment sham despite being warned by constituents over the matter.[437] Having faced an uphill battle running in a district that voted for President Trump in 2016 by over 10 points,[Citation Needed] her campaign was bolstered with ads spent in hundreds of thousands of dollars by super PACs despite previously denouncing money in politics.[438] She has also been backed by a dark money group spending additional hundreds of thousands of dollars to attempt saving her from defeat.[439]
Horn was backed by the globalist Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Horn was renominated with 86% of the vote.[440]
No Republican initially won a majority of the votes in the heavily contested primary to challenge Rep. Horn, with Terry Neese finishing in first place at a plurality of 36.5% of the vote and Stephanie Bice finishing second at 25%.[440] In the runoff held on August 25, 2020, Bice won with 53% of the votes cast.[440]
Despite Democrats and liberal super PACs heavily backing Horn, she lost to Bice in the general election by four points.[441]
Moderate Republican Greg Walden did not seek re-election in 2020.
The Republican primary held in May 2020 was won by state senator Cliff Bentz, who garnered just over 30% of the vote in a heavily contested election.[442] An ardent opponent of the liberal "cap and trade" agenda, Bentz received strong attention in mid-2019 when he and other state senators temporarily fled Oregon to deny Democrat colleagues from obtaining a quorum needed to pass a partisan environmental bill favored by far-leftists.[443]
Alex Spenser won the Democrat primary with just under 33% of the vote.[442]
Bentz won the general election to succeed Walden by over twenty points.[444]
Democrat representative Peter DeFazio ran for re-election. DeFazio, a liberal career politician, is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the sham impeachment resolutions.
Rep. DeFazio won his party's primary held in May 2020 with nearly 85% of the vote.[442]
Former Oregon National Guard soldier Alek Skarlatos ran for and won the Republican primary with almost 90% of the vote over opponent Nelson Ijih.[442] Skarlatos, who heroically disarmed a suspected jihadist with an AK-47, has been harshly attacked by liberal media sources.[445]
Despite Skarlato's strong campaign challenging DeFazio, the latter won re-election by five percentage points,[444] though the representative significantly under-performed past victory margins.
Kurt Schrader, the Democrat representative from Oregon's 5th congressional district, ran for re-election. Schrader voted in favor of the impeachment sham resolutions.
Rep. Schrader won the Democrat primary held on May 19, 2020 with 70% of the vote.[442]
Republican Amy Ryan Courser won the respective primary with 54% of the vote.[442]
Despite the seat being considered a safe hold, Schrader only won re-election by seven points.[444]
Moderate RINO[446] Brian Fitzpatrick ran for re-election. While largely anti-Trump, Fitzpatrick voted against the sham articles of impeachment. Strongly anti-Second Amendment, his bid is endorsed by a top gun control group.[447] He faced a strong challenge from left-wing Democrat Christina Finello, who ran on a campaign falsely accusing the representative of supposedly being very partisan.
The congressional district covers the entirety of Bucks County, a mostly urban/suburban district that favors establishmentarians, having swung for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 U.S. presidential election by one point while also favoring Pat Toomey in his re-election bid then by five points.[448]
Rep. Fitzpatrick was renominated with 60% of the vote in the Republican primary, defeating his much more conservative and pro-Trump[449] challenger Andy Meehan by only 20 points,[450] under-performing in comparison to most House Republican incumbents who easily won their primaries by landslide margins.
The Democrat primary was won by Finello with 78% of the vote.[450]
At the debate between Fitzpatrick and Finello held in early October 2020, Finello attempted to paint the representative as highly partisan, which was refuted by the former, who touted his record overall as being "bipartisan".[451]
Despite some who suggested a very close race and a possible flip, Fitzpatrick handily retained his seat by a margin of over ten points.[452] Likely having been able to appeal to many moderate voters given his record, he significantly outperformed Donald Trump in the area.[453]
Democrat representative Madeleine Dean ran for re-election. Dean is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the impeachment coup against Donald Trump. An outspoken deceitful liberal, she falsely suggested that Trump "seems to cheer" white supremacy.[454]
Rep. Dean won renomination with no primary challengers.[450]
The Republican primary was won by Kathy Barnette, who ran uncontested.[450]
Dean won re-election by a nineteen-point margin.[452]
Democrat Mary Gay Scanlon ran for re-election. Scanlon is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the impeachment sham resolutions.
Rep. Scanlon won the Democrat primary unopposed.[450]
The Republican primary was won by Dasha Pruett, who garnered 61.5% of the vote.[450]
Scanlon won re-election by nearly a thirty-point margin.[452]
Democrat Chrissy Houlahan, a member of the Gang of Nine,[82] ran for re-election. Houlahan voted in favor of the sham articles of impeachment. According to a watchdog report, one of her companies had ties with Chinese sweatshops abusing workers.[455] A bait and switch-pulling liberal, Houlahan ran a 2018 campaign keeping distance from Nancy Pelosi[456] though quickly voicing support for her as House speaker once elected.[457] Despite such, her seat was considered to be a safe hold due to redistricting in 2018 that made the 6th congressional district much more liberal.[458]
Rep. Houlahan won her party's primary election unopposed.[450]
The Republican primary was won by John Emmons, who ran uncontested.[450]
Houlahan won re-election over Emmons by a twelve-point margin despite her past record.[452]
Democrat Susan Wild sought reelection. Wild is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment sham. She was elected in the 2018 Midterms in both the special and general elections to succeed anti-Trump Republican representative Charlie Dent, who resigned on May 12, 2018.
The congressional district currently is liberal-leaning, having been redistricted from a previous map where its bizarre shape then had resembled Disney character Goofy kicking Donald Duck.[459][460]
Wild was unopposed in her party's primary election.[450]
The Republican primary was won by Lisa Scheller with 52% of the vote.[450]
(lost) |
(won) |
Democrat Matt Cartwright sought reelection. Cartwright is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and a sponsor of the socialist Medicare for All bill. He voted for the impeachment sham resolutions. Cartwright's Republican challenger Jim Bognet has noted him to be "out of touch" with his congressional district amidst the 2020 Leftwing riots[461] and especially for being open to de-funding local Pennsylvania police departments.[462] Bognet also released an ad inviting residents of Portland, Oregon to move to the district amidst far-left riots in the Democrat-run city.[463] It was noted that the district had become more Republican-leaning.[464]
In an interview with Breitbart News Network in late October 2020, Bognet said:[465]
Matt, we are going to win this seat on Tuesday, and northeastern Pennsylvania is going to deliver a huge majority for President Trump and allow him to win Pennsylvania. |
Cartwright ran unopposed in the Democrat primary.[450]
The Republican primary was won by Bognet in a strongly contested race with a plurality of 28% of the vote.[450]
Despite Bognet's strong candidacy, he lost to the incumbent Cartwright by just around four points.[452]
Conservative Republican Scott Perry ran for re-election. A member of the House Freedom Caucus, Perry voted against the impeachment coup.
Rep. Perry won renomination uncontested.[450]
The Democrat primary election was won by Eugene DePasquale with 59% of the vote.[450] The current Pennsylvania Auditor General serving alongside corrupt leftist governor Tom Wolf, DePasquale illegally used over one hundred thousand dollars to boost his campaign.[466] Despite having conducted an audit in September 2020 into Wolf's actions, he was suspected to have been ethically compromised after the left-wing governor donated several thousand dollars to his congressional campaign.[467]
Despite some who suggested a tossup, Perry won re-election with 53% of the vote in a crucial hold for Republicans.[452]
Republican Guy Reschenthaler ran for re-election. Reschenthaler voted against the impeachment coup.
Rep. Reschenthaler won the Republican primary uncontested.[450]
The Democrat primary was won by Bill Marx, who ran unopposed.[450]
Representing a mostly conservative, Republican-favoring area, Reschenthaler won re-election with 65% of the vote.[452]
Republican Mike Kelly ran for re-election. Rep. Kelly voted against the impeachment sham.
Kelly won his party's primary election unopposed.[450]
The Democrat primary was won by Kristy Gnibus, who ran uncontested.[450]
Rep. Kelly won re-election by almost a margin of almost twenty percentage points.[452]
Establishment Democrat Conor Lamb sought re-election. Lamb voted in favor of the sham articles of impeachment. He was noted by President Trump in late May 2020 as an "American fraud"[468] after holding a liberal voting record despite campaigning on a more moderate, pragmatic platform that included praising Trump's steel and aluminum tariffs.[469] In July 2020, Lamb's brother, who managed his campaign, said that Republican opponent Sean Parnell should "burn in hell and die".[470] An intern for Lamb in late October 2020 was caught intimidating voters.[471] The "moderate" representative has voted with the Squad around 90% of the time.[472]
Rep. Lamb was renominated with no primary challengers.[450]
The Republican primary was won by Parnell, who ran unopposed.[450]
Lamb won re-election very narrowly by a two-point margin over Parnell.[452]
(won) |
(lost) |
Democrat Joe Cunningham ran for reelection. Cunningham voted for the impeachment sham resolution. Representing a district that voted for Donald Trump by over 10 points in the 2016 U.S. presidential election,[Citation Needed] he faced an uphill battle in his bid for a second House term, having faced a strong challenge from conservative state representative Nancy Mace.
Cunningham received the backing of the Chamber of Commerce.[33]
A liberal hypocrite, Cunningham has publicly denounced lobbyists yet registered as one to bolster a Florida yacht club.[473]
Cunningham won renomination with no primary challengers.[474]
The Republican primary was won by Mace with 57.5% of the votes cast.[474]
Cunningham lost the general election to Mace by a very narrow margin of one percentage point.[475]
Republican Joe Wilson sought re-election. Wilson voted against the impeachment coup.
The Democrat primary was won by Adair Boroughs, who ran uncontested.[474]
Wilson won the general election by thirteen points.[475]
Rep. Clyburn ran for re-election to another House term.
|
Establishment Democrat James Clyburn ran for re-election. Clyburn voted in favor of the sham articles of impeachment.
Rep. Clyburn won renomination unopposed.[474]
The Republican primary was won by John McCollumm, who ran unopposed.[474]
Representing an extremely liberal district, Clyburn won re-election by nearly forty points.[475]
Dusty Johnson, the conservative representative from South Dakota's at-large district, ran for re-election to a second House term.[476]
Rep. Johnson was easily renominated in his party's primary with three-quarters of the votes cast.[477] No Democrat filed to run for the seat.
Facing no major challenge, Johnson easily won the general election.[478]
Republican Phil Roe retired.
The Republican primary was won by Diana Harshbarger with a plurality of 19% of the vote in a heavily contested race.[479]
The Democrat primary was won by Blair Walsingham with 53% of the vote.[479]
Harshbarger easily won the general election with three-quarters of the vote.[480]
Republican representative Chuck Fleischmann ran for re-election. Fleischmann voted against the sham articles of impeachment.
Rep. Flesichmann was renominated with no primary challengers.[479]
The Democrat primary election was won by Meg Gorman, who ran unopposed.
Fleischmann easily won re-election with 67% of the votes cast.[480]
Republican David Kustoff ran for re-election. Kustoff voted against the impeachment coup.
Kustoff won renomination with no primary challengers.[479]
The Democrat primary was won by Erika Pearson with just over half of the votes cast.[479]
Representing a largely conservative area, Kustoff easily won re-election with nearly 70% of the vote.[480]
Democrat Steve Cohen ran for re-election. Cohen is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the impeachment coup against Donald Trump.
Cohen won renomination with 84% of the vote.[479]
The Republican primary was won by Charlotte Bergmann, who ran unopposed.[479]
Rep. Cohen won re-election with 77% of the vote over Bergman.[480]
Louie Gohmert, the Republican representative from Texas' first district, ran for re-election to another House term. An anti-establishment conservative, Gohmert introduced a bill in late July 2020 to ban the Democratic Party over their historical support for slavery.[481]
Rep. Gohmert was renominated with almost 90% of the vote in the Republican primary.[482]
Gohmert won re-election with 73% of the vote.[483]
The red flag law-supporting[484] Moderate Republican Dan Crenshaw ran for re-election to a second House term. He has justified the neocon agenda of endless wars[485] and caved into politically correct demands to remove Civil War-era statues.[486]
No candidate won a majority of the votes casted in the Democrat primary, with Sima Ladjevardian obtaining a plurality of 47.6%.[482] As a result, a runoff will soon follow under Texas law.
While some, especially in the media, considered the House seat to be vulnerable, Crenshaw won re-election by a thirteen-point margin.[483]
Republican representative Van Taylor ran for re-election.
No candidate won a majority in the Democrat primary, with Lulu Seikaly garnering a plurality of 44.5%,[482] thus triggering a runoff.
Despite some who anticipated a close race and a possible flip for the Democrats, Rep. Taylor won re-election by over ten points.[483]
The seat was vacated by Republican John Ratcliffe, who was successfully nominated by President Trump to become the Director of National Intelligence (DNI).
Republican candidate Pat Fallon won the general election in a landslide to succeed Ratcliffe.[483]
Republican Lance Gooden ran for re-election. Gooden voted against the Democrat sham impeachment against Donald Trump.
Gooden easily won the Republican primary held on March 3, 2020, garnering over 80% of the vote.[482]
Gooden won re-election handily.[483]
Republican representative Ron Wright ran for re-election. Rep. Wright voted against the impeachment coup.
Wright won re-election by nine points.[483]
(lost) |
(won) |
Lizzie Fletcher, the Democrat representative from Texas' 7th district, ran for re-election to a second House term. Fletcher voted for the sham impeachment resolution.
Fletcher was backed by the globalist Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Wesley Hunt won the Republican primary with 61% of the votes casted.[482] He has been noted by the Washington Free Beacon as a "rising GOP star".[487]
Despite Hunt's strong candidacy as well as the district having previously been more Republican-favoring, Fletcher won the general election by a close margin of three points.[483]
The far-left Democrat Al Green ran for re-election. Green pushed for and voted in favor of the impeachment coup against President Trump. He has been caught on MSNBC voicing concerns that if Trump isn't impeached, "he will get re-elected."[488]
Rep. Green easily won the primary held on March 3, 2020, garnering over 80% of the votes casted.[482]
Devout Christian and pastor Johnny Teague won the Republican primary, obtaining 58.6% of the vote.[482]
Representing a very liberal district, Green won re-election very easily with over 75%, almost 80% of the vote over Teague.[483]
Establishment globalist Republican Michael McCaul is running for re-election. McCaul voted against the impeachment hoax. A strong critic of the CCP, the regime has targeted him with a coordinated disinformation campaign.[489]
No candidate won a majority of the votes casted in the Democrat primary, with Mike Siegel obtaining a plurality of 44%,[482] thus triggering a runoff. Siegel has defended far-left terrorist William Ayers.[490]
Despite the race being expected to be close, with the Cook Political Report quickly changing its rating for the election from "Lean R" to "tossup" right before Election Day, McCaul managed to hold his seat by a seven-point margin.[483]
Rep. Mike Conaway, the Republican from Texas' 11th district, retired.
August Pfluger won the Republican primary with just over 52% of the vote.[482]
Pfluger easily won the general election with eighty percent of the vote.[483]
Republican representative Mac Thornberry retired.
No candidate won a majority in the Republican primary, with Josh Winegarner obtaining a plurality of 38.8%.[482] The runoff was ultimately won by Ronny Jackson.
No candidate won a majority of the votes in the Democrat primary, with Gus Trujillo garnering a plurality of 42.2% of the votes.[482]
Jackson won the general election in a landslide.[483]
Democrat Veronica Escobar ran for re-election. Escobar is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the impeachment coup. She has previously been mentioned as a potential VP pick for Democrat presidential candidate Joe Biden.[491]
No candidate obtained a majority of the votes in the primary, with Sam Williams garnering a plurality of 31.2%.[482]
Escobar won re-election with 65% of the vote.[483]
Republican representative Bill Flores retired.
No candidate won a majority of the votes in the Republican primary, with former representative Pete Sessions obtaining a plurality at 31.6%.[482]
No candidate obtained a majority of the votes casted in the Democrat primary, with Rick Kennedy garnering a plurality at just under 48%.[482]
Sessions won the general election by a fifteen-point margin to succeed Flores.[483]
Incumbent Sheila Jackson Lee sought re-election.
Wendell Champion won the Republican primary with more than 70% of the vote.[482]
Sheila Jackson Lee easily won the primary election with over 80% of the vote.[482]
Far-left Democrat representative Sheila Jackson Lee was easily re-elected by over 50 points.
The left-wing, fascist, extremist Democrat Joaquin Castro sought re-election. Castro voted for the impeachment sham resolution.
Castro was easily re-nominated, obtaining over 90% of the vote in the Democrat primary.[482]
No candidate won a majority of the votes in the Republican primary,[482] thus triggering a runoff.
Castro won re-election by around thirty points.[483]
Republican Chip Roy ran for re-election. Roy voted against the sham articles of impeachment.
Far-leftist Wendy Davis, who unsuccessfully ran for governor in 2014, won the Democrat primary held on March 3, 2020.[482] Extremely radical, she has advocated for allowing late-term abortion while in the state Senate, for which she was called out by Roy.[492] Unsurprisingly, her campaign was backed by George Soros.[493] She has campaigned indoors[494] despite such events considered to be at a higher risk of spreading COVID-19.[495]
Despite many who viewed the race as a likely flip for the Democrats, Roy won re-election by seven points.[483]
Rep. Pete Olson retired.
No candidate won a majority of the votes in the Republican primary, with Troy Nehls winning just over 40% of the votes casted.[482] A runoff soon followed, where Nehls won with the backing of the globalist Chamber of Commerce.[496] Despite having previously voiced support for President Trump and his policies, Nehls removed all mention of such from his campaign website after receiving the nomination.[497]
Extremist liberal Sri Kulkarni, who has been arrested over cocaine,[498] won the Democrat primary with 53.1% of the vote.[482]
Nehls, who is moderate toward Trump[499] and did not respond to the president's wholehearted endorsement,[497] won the general election to succeed Olson with just over 51% of the votes cast.[483][500]
Anti-Trump RINO Will Hurd retired.
No Republican won a majority of the votes in the primary, with Navy officer and cryptologist Tony Gonzales obtaining a plurality of only 28.1%.[482]
Leftist Gina Ortiz Jones won the Democrat primary with 66.8% of the votes cast.[482] Jones unsuccessfully challenged Rep. Hurd in the 2018 Midterms, losing by a close margin despite having her campaign bankrolled then by Nancy Pelosi and Elizabeth Warren.[501] She received the backing of the "Human Rights Campaign" in her run for the open seat.[502]
Despite the fact that every election rating aside from RCP rated the race as "Lean D", Gonzales defeated Ortiz Jones in an upset victory to retain the seat for the Republicans.[483] Politico, which endorsed Jones' bid, attributed her defeat along with that of other House Democrats in the cycle to poor campaign strategies.[503]
Rep. Kenny Marchant retired.
Beth Van Duyne, a former mayor of Irving, Texas, won the Republican primary with 64.3% of the vote.[482]
No candidate won a majority of the votes in the Democrat primary, with Kim Olson obtaining just over 40% of the vote.[482]
Despite the seat being viewed as a likely flip, with the Cook Political Report changing its rating from "tossup" to "Lean D" right before Election Day, Van Duyne defeated Valenzuela in the general election by one percentage point.[483]
Republican Roger Williams from Texas' 25th district ran for re-election. Williams voted against the impeachment coup.
Rep. Williams was re-nominated with over 80% of the vote.[482]
Julie Oliver won the Democrat primary, obtaining nearly 70% of the vote.[482] She has been praised by far-leftist Elizabeth Warren for calling for a 90% tax rate on super PAC donations.[504]
Williams won re-election by over ten points.[483]
Democrat Colin Allred ran for re-election. Allred voted for the impeachment sham.
Allred received the endorsement of the Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Genevieve Collins won the Republican primary with 52.6% of the vote.[482]
Representing an increasingly liberal district, Allred won re-election by six percentage points.[483]
Republican representative Rob Bishop retired.
The Republican primary was won by Blake Moore with a plurality of 31% of the votes cast.[505]
The Democrat primary was won by Darren Parry with just over half of the votes cast.[505]
Moore won the general election with just under 70% of the vote to succeed Bishop.[506]
Freshman Democrat Ben McAdams sought re-election in a mostly Republican district to a second House term. McAdams voted for the impeachment sham resolution. Despite campaigning in 2018 as being strongly pro-life,[507] he was noted for having made pro-abortion votes while previously serving in the Utah Senate, and currently only has a "D" rating from the Susan B. Anthony List.[508] Having faced a strong challenge from conservative football player Burgess Owens, a black Republican, McAdams's election was considered a "tossup".
The New York Slimes has published an article claiming that Owens took illegal campaign contributions, which he rebuked.[509]
McAdams received the endorsement of the globalist Chamber of Commerce.
McAdams won renomination with no primary challengers.[505]
The heavily contested Republican primary was won by Owens with 43.5% of the vote.[505]
Following many days past Election Day, Owens was declared the winner of the race, defeating McAdams by one percentage point.[506]
Peter Welch, the left-wing[510] representative from Vermont's at-large district, ran for re-election. Welch is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the impeachment coup against Donald Trump.
Rep. Welch easily won renomination with 96% of the votes cast in the Democrat primary.[511]
The Republican primary was won by Miriam Berry with 34% of the vote.[511]
Welch handily won re-election.[512]
Republican representative Robert Wittman of Virginia's 1st congressional district ran for re-election. Wittman voted against the sham articles of impeachment.
Wittman won his party's primary uncontested.[513]
The Democrat primary was won by Qasim Rashid with 53% of the vote.[513]
Wittman handily won re-election to another House term.[514]
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Establishment Democrat Elaine Luria, a member of the Gang of Nine,[82] ran for re-election. Luria voted in favor of the sham articles of impeachment. A hypocrite, she talked tough on China over national security concerns despite investing hundreds of thousands of dollars in a major Chinese company.[515] Among the Gang of Nine, she has been portrayed by the establishment media as being "moderate"[516][517] despite holding a voting record as liberal as most of her colleagues.
Luria received the endorsement of the globalist Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Rep. Luria won her party's primary election with no challengers.[513]
The Republican primary was won by Scott Taylor with 48% of the votes cast.[513]
Luria won the general election to a second House term by a margin of six percentage points.[514]
Republican representative Denver Riggleman ran for re-election. Riggleman voted against the sham articles of impeachment.
Riggleman lost renomination to his more conservative challenger Bob Good in the district convention;[518] this was after he officiated a same-sex "wedding"[519] and had been criticized by Good for favoring an increase in legal immigration levels,[520] a measure contrary to President Trump's America First priorities. After losing, Riggleman blamed "voting irregularities and ballot stuffing".[521] He also had reportedly threatened his House predecessor Tom Garrett for supporting Good in the convention.[522]
After his upset defeat, Riggleman joined Democrat Tom Malinowski in introducing a resolution to condemn QAnon.[523]
The Democrat primary was won by Cameron Webb with 66.5% of the vote.[513] Webb has acted as an apologist for far-leftists seeking to defund the police.[524]
Despite fake election ratings which anticipated a "tossup" and a possible flip for the Democrats, Good won the general election by five points.[514]
Republican Ben Cline ran for re-election. Cline voted against the sham articles of impeachment.
Cline won renomination with no primary challengers.[513]
The Democrat primary was won by Nicholas Betts, who ran uncontested.[Citation Needed]
Cline easily won re-election.[514]
Establishment Democrat Abigail Spanberger, a member of the Gang of Nine,[82] sought re-election. Rep. Spanberger voted in favor of the impeachment coup. After defeating then-incumbent Republican David Brat in being elected during the 2018 Midterms[525] partially due to redistricting that made the seventh congressional district more liberal,[526] Spanberger proved to be left-wing and anti-Trump despite campaigning on a much more moderate platform.
Spanberger received the backing of the Chamber of Commerce.[33]
Spanberger won renomination with no primary challengers.[513]
The Republican convention was won by Nick Freitas.[Citation Needed] A combat veteran who fought in the Middle East, he called out Spanberger for touting the Iran nuclear deal.[527]
Spanberger won re-election by a very narrow margin of just under two percentage points.[514]
Democrat Jennifer Wexton ran for re-election. Wexton voted for the sham articles of impeachment. A freshman representative, she was elected during the 2018 Midterms in an affluent district neighboring the swamp amidst a blue wave, defeating establishment Republican then-incumbent Barbara Comstock by over ten points.[528] President Trump noted that Comstock "didn't have any embrace" towards him.[529] Despite being very liberal[530] and despite the establishment media[531][532] in addition to Wikipedia[533] claiming that Wexton is a "moderate", she has voted with her party line nearly all the time.[534]
Wexton won her party's primary uncontested.[513]
The Republican convention was won by Aliscia Andrews.[Citation Needed]
Representing an increasingly liberal district, Wexton won the general election over Andrews by over ten points.[514]
Democrat Gerry Connolly ran for re-election. Connolly voted for the sham articles of impeachment.
Rep. Connolly won his party's primary with 78% of the vote.[513]
The Republican primary was won by Manga Anantatmula.[Citation Needed]
Connolly easily won re-election.[514]
Under Washington state law, all candidates running for Congress compete in a single primary election irrespective of party, with the top two proceeding to the ballot for the general election.
Republican representative Jaime Herrera Beutler ran for re-election. Herrera Beutler voted against the sham articles of impeachment. She faced a challenge from Democrat Carolyn Long, who has attacked the mostly conservative representative over alleged ties to Big Pharma, yet hypocritically relies on such financially.[535]
Rep. Herrera Beutler won renomination with 56% of the vote; finishing in second place was Long with 40% of the vote.[536]
Despite fake election ratings which suggested a close race, Herrera Beutler won by a margin of over ten points.[537]
Republican Cathy McMorris Rodgers ran for re-election. McMorris Rodgers voted against the sham articles of impeachment.
Rep. McMorris Rodgers won renomination with 53% of the vote;[536] finished second place was Democrat Dave Wilson with 24% of the votes cast.[536]
McMorris Rodgers easily won re-election with 61% of the vote.[537]
Democrat Derek Kilmer sought re-election. Kilmer voted for the impeachment coup.
Kilmer won renomination in first place with 47% of the vote;[536] finished second was Elizabeth Kreiselmaier at 27%.
Kilmer handily won re-election with 59% of the vote.[537]
Far-left Democrat Pramila Jayapal ran for re-election. Jayapal is a co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the impeachment coup against Donald Trump.
Jayapal won renomination with 80% of the vote in the primary;[536] finishing second place was Republican candidate Craig Keller at 8%.
Representing an extremely liberal district, Jayapal won re-election with 83% of the vote.[537]
Democrat Kim Schrier ran for re-election. Schrier voted for the sham articles of impeachment.
Rep. Schrier won renomination in first place with a plurality of 43% of the vote;[536] finishing second place was Jesse Jensen at 20%.[536]
Schrier won re-election narrowly by four percentage points.[537]
Democrat Denny Heck retired.
Finishing first place in the primary was Democrat Marilyn Strickland at 20% of the vote;[536] finishing second place was Beth Doglio, also a Democrat candidate.
Strickland won the general election with 58% of the vote.[537]
Republican David McKinley ran for re-election. McKinley voted against the sham articles of impeachment.
McKinley won renomination uncontested.[538]
The Democrat primary was won by Natalie Cline with 74% of the votes cast.[538]
McKinley handily won re-election.[539]
Republican representative Alex Mooney sought re-election. Mooney voted against the impeachment coup.
Mooney won renomination over a primary challenger with 72% of the vote.[538]
The Democrat primary was won by Cathy Kunkel, who ran uncontested.[538]
Mooney won re-election by over twenty-five points.[539]
Republican Carol Miller ran for re-election. Rep. Miller voted against the sham articles of impeachment.
Miller won renomination with 70% of the vote.[538]
The Democrat primary was won by Hilary Turner with a plurality of 29.5% of the vote.[538]
Rep. Miller easily won re-election with 71% of the vote.[539]
Democrat Mark Pocan ran for re-election. Pocan is a co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted for the impeachment coup.
Pocan won his party's primary uncontested.[540]
The Republican primary was won by Peter Theron, who ran unopposed.[540]
Pocan easily won re-election by almost a forty-point margin, representing a very liberal district.[541]
Democrat Ron Kind ran for re-election. Kind voted in favor of the sham articles of impeachment.
Rep. Kind won renomination with 81% of the vote.[540]
Derrick Van Order won the Republican primary with 66% of the votes cast.[540]
Kind won re-election by three points.[541]
Democrat Gwen Moore ran for re-election. Moore is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and voted in favor of the impeachment coup.
Rep. Moore won renomination with no primary challengers.[540]
The Republican primary was won by Tim Rogers with 50% of the vote.[540]
Moore easily won re-election.[541]
Republican Tom Tiffany ran for re-election to a full House term.
Rep. Tiffany won renomination with no primary challengers.[540]
The Democrat primary was won by Tricia Zunker, who ran unopposed.[540]
Tiffany easily won the general election by around a twenty-point margin.[541]
Republican Mike Gallagher ran for re-election to another House term. Gallagher voted against the sham articles of impeachment.
Rep. Gallagher won renomination with no primary challengers.[540]
The Democrat primary was won by Amanda Stuck, who ran unopposed.[540]
Gallagher easily won re-election to another House term.[541]
Rep. Cheney ran for re-election.
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Liz Cheney, the neocon Republican representative from Wyoming's at-large district, ran for re-election to a third House term.[542] She was previously a potential to run for the Senate seat vacated by the retiring Mike Enzi, but declined in favor of seeking re-election, emphasizing importance in working to "take our GOP majority back." Cheney voted against the impeachment coup.
Rep. Cheney won renomination with 74% of the vote.[543]
The Democrat primary was won by Lynnette Grey Bull with 60% of the votes cast.[543]
Representing a very Republican state, Cheney easily won re-election in a landslide.[544]
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Categories: [United States Congress] [United States Politics] [United States House of Representatives] [2020s]